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| The baby whale that was stranded at Surfers Paradise yesterday is reunited with its mother off the Gold Coast. Picture: Brendan Radke / Gold Coast Bulletin |
Stranded
baby whale back in the deep
Pictures
have shown a baby humpback whale reunited with its mother off the Gold Coast.
MARINE
experts say they are cautiously optimistic a baby humpback whale rescued in a
marathon operation on the Gold Coast has survived and been reunited with his
mother.
Director of
Marine Sciences at Sea World Trevor Long said a mother and calf filmed by TV
choppers today, a day after the rescue, could mean good news.
"Shortly
after first light this morning, the Sea World rescue boat spotted a mother and
calf very close to the location where the rescued calf was last seen
yesterday," he said.
"A
second mother and calf were also located in the vicinity and with the
assistance of the Nine News helicopter, Sea World was able to obtain vision of
both sets of mothers and calves."
After
comparing colour markings, Mr Long ruled out the first calf.
While a positive
identification for the second calf wasn't possible, it was very similar in
colour to the rescued calf.
Related
Coverage
- Gallery: Big baby, big rescue
- Scientists hope baby whale has survived - Herald Sun
- Hope for beached whale - Courier Mail
- Whale with mum 'not the same' - Courier Mail
- Whale and calf 'not the same one' - Perth Now
- Humpback calf 'not stranded baby' - Adelaide Now
"The
Sea World team is cautiously optimistic that the calf was able to reunite with
its mother overnight and continue its migration," he said.
"We
did hear there was an animal down at Tweed Heads that was acting in a different
manner to the other whales, and we were hopeful that may have been the mother.
"That's
certainly within communicating distance for these animals."
Mr Long
said when it was returned to the ocean the calf was tired but in good
condition, and it looked good even after becoming entangled in a shark net just
offshore.
It took a
Sea World team around half an hour to free the calf from the net.
"When
it was fighting to get out of the shark net it had a lot of kick and a lot of
fight in it, so those indicators tell us it was reasonably strong.
"And
on the beach we could see it was quite robust and had wonderful responses and
it did swim off reasonably OK, considering it had been on the beach for 12
hours."
Interest in
the baby whale's fate has been intense, after several thousand people gathered
on Surfers Paradise beach to watch the rescue.
"Australians
seem to be very keen and passionate about whales," Mr Long said.
"I'm
not sure if it's because we're an island nation, but whales are at the core of
our marine animal values and we see that with the interest in the anti-whaling
movement.
"And
it's something we all should enjoy because they're beautiful animals and we're
very rich to have them come past our coast."
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Volunteers
successfully drag a beached baby humpback whale back into the
ocean at Surfers Paradise after it spent several hours stranded on the sand. Picture: Jeremy Pierce |


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