Yahoo – AFP,
14 April 2015
![]() |
A dead
Omura whale has washed up on a remote beach near the town of
Exmouth, north of
Perth, in the wake of Tropical Cyclone Olwyn which hit
the region last month
(AFP Photo/Geoff Parry)
|
A rarely
seen Omura's whale has washed up in Australia, only the second sighting
nationally and one of the few globally, exciting scientists who know little
about the species, officials said Tuesday.
The dead
whale was found on a remote beach near the town of Exmouth, 1,265 kilometres
(784 miles) north of Perth, in the wake of Tropical Cyclone Olwyn which hit the
region last month.
Western
Australia Environment Minister Albert Jacob said it was the first record and
sighting of the species in the state and only the second nationally.
"This
find is highly significant for whale scientists in Western Australia and
researchers globally because there have not been many recorded sightings of
this species so very little is known about it," Jacob said.
"Omura's
whale was only described in scientific journals for the first time in 2003 and
is apparently restricted to tropical and subtropical waters.
"The
knowledge we gain from this whale will help to improve field identification
guides to better understand the whale's regional distribution," he added.
![]() |
A dead
Omura whale has washed up on a remote beach near the town of
Exmouth, north of
Perth, in the wake of Tropical Cyclone Olwyn which hit
the region last month
(AFP Photo/Geoff Parry)
|
"Scientists
know a fair bit about many whale species but this exciting discovery shows
there is still so much more to learn in our oceans."
According
to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, only a handful of
specimens have been found before, including in the Sea of Japan and the Solomon
Sea.
There is no
population estimate, given the scarcity of information about them, with little
known of the species' ecology and virtually nothing about its reproductive
biology.
Jacob said
identifying the 5.68-metre (18-feet) juvenile female was difficult for the
state's Department of Parks and Wildlife, but DNA profiling confirmed it was an
Omura's whale.
The
animals, which have a streamlined and sleek body shape and several unique
skeletal features distinguishing them from other whales, are often incorrectly
identified as a small Fin whale or Bryde's whale.


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