Hundreds of pilot whales die in record mass stranding in Australia - Action News
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Science

Hundreds of pilot whales die in record mass stranding in Australia

The majority of a 470-strong pod of pilot whales found stranded off southern Australia has died, officials said on Wednesday, as rescuers struggled in freezing waters and fading light to free those still alive.

380 whales have died after 470 were found stranded off Macquarie Harbour in Tasmania state on Monday

Mission to rescue whales stranded off Australian coast

4 years ago
Duration 2:02
A rescue mission is underway off the coast of Australia, for about 270 pilot whales stranded on a sandbar. Ninety of them have died, but 25 have been saved so far.

The majority of a 470-strong pod of pilot whales found stranded off southern Australiahas died, officials said on Wednesday, as rescuers struggled in freezing waters and fading light to free those still alive.

The group, which is the biggest beaching in the country's modern history, were first spotted on a wide sandbank during an aerial reconnaissance of rugged Macquarie Harbour in Tasmania state on Monday.

After two days of a difficult and dangerous rescue attempt, state marine scientists said at least 380 of the long-finned pilot whales had died.

This image made from aerial video on Wednesday shows numerous stranded whales along the coastline near the remote west coast town of Strahan on the island state of Tasmania, Australia. (Australian Broadcast Corporation via AP)

By late Wednesday, around 50 of the mammals were freed, but experts said there was a high likelihood they would return as many did during the rescue attempt a day earlier, creating an exhausting loop for rescuers who cannot work through the night.

The outlook for the remaining 30 stranded and still-alive pilot whales, a species of oceanic dolphin that grow to sevenmetres (23 ft) long and can weigh up to threetonnes, was bleak.

"As time goes on, they do become fatigued and their chance of survival reduces," said Nic Deka, Parks and Wildlife Service incident controller. "We do expect to rescue more but increasingly our focus is what do with the carcasses."

The re-floating process involves as many as four or five people per whale wading waist-deep in freezing water, attaching slings to the animals so they can be guided out of the harbour by a boat.

The stranding, about 200 kilometresnorthwest of the state capital, Hobart, is the biggest on record in modern Australiaand one of the largest in the world, drawing attention to a natural phenomenon that remains a mystery to scientists.

In this Sept. 22 photo, members of a rescue crew stand with a whale on a sand bar near Strahan, Australia. (Brodie Weeding/Pool Photo via AP)

"It's certainly a major event and of great concern when we potentially lose that many whales out of a stranding event," said Peter Harrison, a professor at the Southern Cross University Whale Research Group.

"Quite often, we only get to really see them when there are bad outcomes, such as this stranding event. We absolutely need some more investment in research to understand these whales in Australian waters."

In 1996, 320 pilot whales washed up on the coast of Western Australia, in what was then reported to be the country's biggest mass stranding. About 600 pilot whales beached in nearby New Zealand in 2017.

A dead pilot whale calf lies on the beach in Macquarie Heads, Tasmania, on Sept. 22. (Bilal Rashid via Reuters)