Google – AFP, 27 December 2012
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A beached
whale struggles on a shoreline in the Breezy Point neighborhood
of Queens on
December 26, 2012 (Getty Images/AFP/File, Mario Tama)
|
NEW YORK —
An endangered whale that beached in New York City died on Thursday despite a
day-long effort to keep the emaciated 18-meter (60-foot) finback alive by
spraying it with water.
"We
are on the scene and the whale has passed," Robert DiGiovanni, director of
the Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation, told AFP.
The finback
whale, the second biggest animal species in the world after the blue whale, was
found ashore early Wednesday in the Breezy Point neighborhood of Queens.
Police and
firefighters began carefully spraying it with water to keep it alive until
experts could take over.
Mendy
Garron, a specialist from the National Marine Fisheries Service, told AFP on
Wednesday that the outlook was not promising, describing the whale as "really
emaciated."
After a
post-mortem examination, the next big challenge will be the "disposal of
the carcass," Gerron said on Thursday.
"You
need a lot of heavy equipment... they are working on it right now," she
said. "They are looking at... either a potential site to bury it or a
landfill that can take the soft tissue."
Adult
finbacks, which can reach up to 27 meters (88 feet) and weigh up to 70 tons,
are found in all the world's oceans and can live up to 100 years.
According
to the Riverhead Foundation, which is based on Long Island, at least 25 species
of whales and dolphins have been seen in the New York region.
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