According to The St Augustine Record's website, a sperm whale was found beached yesterday evening in a tidal creek in St Augustine. While this raises more questions, it begs for even more answers. Why are they coming in so close to shore? Assuming it is because they are sick, what is causing it? Is there a specific illness spreading within the whale community? Is it tied to the lack of sightings of the right whales? Is it something in the water, something man is doing or is it just the natural order of things? All certainly good questions and while scientifically interesting it is still heart breaking to witness. Here's the article below and the link to the story at The St Augustine Record. Whale on!
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Biologists try to save beached whale by Hospital Creek
Sick whale found in shallow water
June 2, 2012, 12:03 am
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
A team of biologists and marine mammal experts quickly assembled at the end of Ocean Avenue in St. Augustine on Friday evening after a kayaker spotted a small whale circling near Hospital Creek.
Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission workers try to carry the pygmy whale to a truck on Friday evening. By Peter Guinta |
FWC Marine Mammal Biologist Nadia J. Gordon arrived, as did George Biedenbach, director of conservation programs for The Georgia Aquarium Conservation Field Station in Flagler County, Hillary Register of the Jacksonville Zoo & Gardens Stranding Team and Zack McKenna of Eco- Tours.
Gordon said pygmy sperm whales were the second most common stranding mammal, behind bottlenose dolphins, and scientists think that most strandings are caused by cardiomyopathy, which is a heart condition.
Last year, there were four such strandings recorded from the Georgia state line to Flagler County.
“If you see a stranded whale, dolphin or manatee, whether it’s live, dead or tagged, call our hot- line at 888-404-FWCC,” Gordon said. “Don’t try pushing it out to sea again. They’re stranding for a reason. They’ll just wash up on shore somewhere else.”
The long black whale was obviously sick, as it didn’t thrash about when a dozen humans tried to slide it carefully into a rubberized sling. When the sling was moved, it flipped its powerful tail. None of the young crew, working in muddy, shallow water containing sharp oyster whells, were hit by the flip, but some of them came ashore with bloody feet from shell cuts.
This whale was a “kogia,” a genus name. They eat mostly squid and are usually found far offshore.
Gordon said it is difficult to immediately tell if this is a pygmy sperm whale or a dwarf sperm whale, To make it even more difficult to identify, there are also dwarf pygmy whales out there. This one would be sedated but eventually die, she said. After that, marine scientists would do a necropsy, which is an autopsy on animals.
“The more we can learn about them, the more we can help the species,” Gordon said.
THE ST AUGUSTINE RECORD