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New Brunswick

Another North Atlantic right whale found dead in Gulf of St. Lawrence

The Department of Fisheries and Oceans said an 11th North Atlantic right whale has been found dead in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Department officials will attempt to recover the carcass and perform a necropsy.

DFO said the whale carcass was located off Miscou Island after a surveillance flight

Another North Atlantic Right whale has been found dead in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, off Miscou Island. (Center for Coastal Studies/NOAA permit #19315)

Another North Atlantic right whale has been found dead in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

The Department of Fisheries and Oceans said in a release the carcass was found Friday morning off MiscouIsland following a surveillance flight.

The department said it is the11th confirmed death of a North Atlantic right whalein the Gulf in recent months.

DFO said it will attempt to recover and perform a necropsy on the whale next week.

"The Department cannot confirm if this whale is the same individual that was spotted entangled off the Gasp Penninsula at the end of August," the statement read.

Numerous whale deaths

This right whale is one of many "unprecedented"whale deaths which occurred this summer. The whales are among the rarest marine mammals in the world and number no more than 500.

In August, FisheriesMinisterDominic LeBlanc said the department would bring"absolutely every protection to bear" to prevent the deaths of North Atlantic Right whales.

Days later, Transport Minister Marc Garneau announceda mandatory slowdownin the Gulf for vessels of more than 20 metres in length.

Part of the snow crab fishery was also closed in aneffortto save the remaining population ofNorth Atlantic right whales.

Necropsiesperformed on three whales previously found in the Gulf revealed that two of their deaths were a result of collisions with ships.The other died as a resultofentanglement.

At least 13 North Atlantic right whaleshave been found dead off the coast of the U.S. and Canada this year, promptingthe U.S. government to launch an investigation into what it described as"an unusual mortality event."