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| An autopsy revealed 80 plastic bags weighing up to eight kilograms (18 pounds) in the whale's stomach (AFP Photo) |
Bangkok (AFP) - A whale has died in southern Thailand after swallowing more than 80 plastic bags, officials said, ending an attempted rescue that failed to nurse the mammal back to health.
Thailand is
one of the world's largest consumers of plastic bags, which kill hundreds of
marine creatures living near the country's popular beaches each year.
The small
male pilot whale became the latest victim after it was found barely alive in a
canal near the border with Malaysia, the Department of Marine and Coastal
Resources said on their Facebook page Saturday.
A
veterinary team tried "to help stabilise its illness but finally the whale
died" on Friday afternoon, the post said.
An autopsy
revealed 80 plastic bags weighing up to eight kilograms (18 pounds) in the
creature's stomach, the department added.
Photos
accompanying the post showed a group of people using buoys to keep the whale
afloat after it was first spotted on Monday and an umbrella to shield it from
the scorching sun.
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The whale
was the latest victim of plastic bags which kill hundreds of marine
creatures living
near Thailand's popular beaches each year (AFP Photo)
|
The whale
vomited up five bags during the rescue attempt before it died, the department
said.
Thon
Thamrongnawasawat, a marine biologist and lecturer at Kasetsart University,
said the bags had made it impossible for the whale to eat any nutritional food.
"If
you have 80 plastic bags in your stomach, you die," he said.
At least
300 marine animals including pilot whales, sea turtles and dolphins perish each
year in Thai waters after ingesting plastic, Thon told AFP.
"It's
a huge problem," he said. "We use a lot of plastic."
The pilot
whale's plight generated sympathy and anger among Thai netizens.
"I
feel sorry for the animal that didn't do anything wrong but has to bear the
brunt of human actions," one Twitter user wrote in Thai.
VIDEO: A mangrove forest in Vietnam's Thanh Hoa province is draped with plastic rubbish washed in with the tide, a symptom of the plastic crisis that has gripped Asia #WorldEnvironmentDay pic.twitter.com/4p3jgYbGH1— AFP news agency (@AFP) June 5, 2018


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