Sydney.
Rescuers were racing against the clock on Monday to save two huge sperm whales
stranded on a Tasmanian sandbank after 22 others died, the Parks and Wildlife
Service said.
Marine
mammal specialists were on site in Macquarie Harbour at Strahan on Tasmania’s
northwest coast, but the rescue bid was hampered by rough weather.
Twenty-two
of the whales — each weighing two tonnes and up to 12 meters long — washed
ashore on Saturday at Ocean Beach near Strahan, and all of them died.
Four others
came into the harbor and became stranded on a sandbank. Two of these were
successfully refloated and swam back out to sea, but the other two remain
stuck.
Rescuers
said two minke whales also got into trouble nearby and died.
Tasmanian
Parks and Wildlife incident controller Chris Arthur said the sperm whales were
so big that they could not simply be pulled into deeper water by volunteers,
instead requiring a more complicated rescue operation.
“A
specially-developed net attached to two boats has been designed to slip under a
whale, enabling it to be hauled from immediate danger,” he said.
“This
method can be used for large animals and is very effective.”
But
conditions were worsening, with high winds and seas, and attempts to refloat
the whales had to be postponed until Tuesday.
“Although
we were unable to move the surviving whales into open water today, we are
hoping conditions will improve over the next few days,” Arthur said, adding
that the whales were tired but still flapping their fins and blowing water.
“The
weather conditions are against us at present, but managed properly, these
animals can survive at least a few days.”
Another
problem in Strahan is its treacherous narrow channel, known as Hells Gates,
through which the whales must pass to get back into deeper water.
“Pushing a
large whale against sea surging through the 25-meter passage is like pushing a
cork into a bottle,” added Arthur.
But he
expressed confidence given that seven sperm whales were saved after a similar
stranding in the harbor in 2007.
The Parks
and Wildlife Service said that samples had been taken from the 22 dead whales,
which will remain on the beach until they decompose because they are too large
to move or bury.
Explaining
why they died, Arthur said: “People seem to forget that these animals breathe
air. When they are caught in the surf and they are being rolled around, they
are in the sand — they can’t get their blowholes up to get oxygen.”
Whale
beachings are relatively common in Australia and they usually occur in the
summer months, particularly around Tasmania, but scientists do not know why
they happen.
Agence France-Presse

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