Jakarta Globe – AFP, Dec 08, 2014
Sydney. A pod of six sperm whales washed up dead Monday in a rare mass stranding on the South Australia coast, with animal welfare officials struggling over the logistics of handling the huge carcasses.
Sydney. A pod of six sperm whales washed up dead Monday in a rare mass stranding on the South Australia coast, with animal welfare officials struggling over the logistics of handling the huge carcasses.
The whales,
which can weigh up to 50 metric tons, were found at low tide by residents on
Parara beach, about 150 kilometers northwest of Adelaide.
“We’re not
sure why they beached,” a Department of Environment official told AFP “A theory
is that one was ill and moved to shallow waters and then called out to fellow
pod members who followed it in.”
A local
fisherman suggested they could have been chasing a school of salmon.
Animal
welfare manager Deborah Kelly said it was rare to see whales beach in the area.
“I haven’t
seen a marine event like this in South Australia since the mass stranding of 58
dolphins at Nepean Bay in the 1990s,” she told the Adelaide Advertiser.
The
department official said police and the council were considering their options
on how to handle the carcasses, which were now in shallow waters and could
attract sharks.
“It’s a
very big logistical task,” the official said.
Sperm
whales is the largest of the toothed whale species and can grow up to 16
meters. It has the largest brain of any known animal currently in existence.
Agence France-Presse

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