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| .Pilot whales can get trapped if they follow their prey into shallow water (AFP Photo/David SCHWARZHANS) |
Reykjavik (AFP) - Some 20 pilot whales have died stranded in mysterious circumstances on the south-western coast of Iceland, emergency services said Saturday, only two weeks after a similarly unexplained mass stranding had already killed dozens of the long-finned cetaceans.
The dead
whales, part of a group of 50 stranded whales, were discovered late Friday near
Gardur, some 50 kilometres (31 miles) from the capital Reykjavik.
According
to Icelandic media, locals began rescue efforts to save the whales even before
emergency teams arrived.
"Around
90 volunteers worked all night to keep the animals wet," David Mar
Bjarnason, a spokesman for the Icelandic research and rescue association, told
AFP.
By 08H00
GMT the last of the surviving whales were back in deep water.
"We
had to wait for high tide to get them back into the sea," Bjarnason said.
Pilot
whales are relatively plentiful, with their stock in the Atlantic estimated at
between 500,000 and 800,000 animals.
Last month
52 dead stranded whales were spotted on a remote beach in the west of the north
Atlantic island nation.
Pilot
whales, which belong to the dolphin family and feed primarily on squid, can
sometimes get stuck if they follow their prey into shallow coastal waters.
But
scientists are mystified as to why such large numbers should get stranded at
the same time.
Some
theories mention magnetic field interference, while others say that a pod of
pilot whales will always follow a single leader -- even if that dominant whale
leads them into mortal danger.

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