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World

Boaters asked to look for blue whale tangled in line off California coast

Searchers were trying on Saturday to locate a blue whale entangled in a fishing line off the southern California coast after efforts to free it failed on Friday.

Officials have asked boaters to alert them if they spot the whale so it can be rescued

In this Aug. 14, 2008, file photo provided by Cascadia Research, a blue whale is shown near a cargo ship in the Santa Barbara Channel off the California coast. Efforts are due to resume off the coast this morning to free a blue whale tangled in a fishing line. (Cascadia Research, John Calambokidis/The Associated Press)

Boats, airplanes and helicopters searched the Southern California coast Saturday for a blue whale that got tangled up in line, and rescuers said unless they free it, the massive mammal could eventually die.

A Los Angeles County sheriff's helicopter was among the craft searching for the whale from Santa Barbara south to Orange County.

"My gut feeling is it went south," but its actual path remained a mystery, said Peter Wallerstein, president of the nonprofit group Marine Animal Rescue.

"We're having to look all over for it," he said.

The whale was estimated to be 25 metres long, twice the size of the average city bus. It was spotted Friday in the channel between Santa Catalina Island and the mainland.

The whale was towing a 60-metre line with an attached buoy that may be from a crab pot, Wallerstein said.

The whale was spouting, swimming on the surface and occasionally diving. It appeared healthy, if a little thin, but the huge animal cannot drag the line forever, Wallerstein said.

"Eventually it's going to get tired out and die," he said.

The sea was too rough to try approaching the whale or cutting the line Friday evening so rescuers just attached a larger buoy to make it easier to spot. However, it slipped away overnight.

Blue whales are the largest animal species that ever lived. They can reached 30 metres in length and weigh 180 tonnes.

Wallerstein said that while rescuers have untangled smaller grey whales caught in fishing nets, it was the first time anyone in California has seen an entangled blue whale and rescuers want to proceed cautiously.

"We haven't had experience with such a large animal," he said. "One flip of the tail could kill you and knock your boat out."

With many people out boating for the Labour Day weekend, rescuers are hoping to get word of the whale's whereabouts.

Anyone spotting the whale should contact authorities but don't get near it, Wallerstein said.

RAW: Whale caught in net

9 years ago
Duration 1:40
Disentanglement team working to free a blue whale trapped in a net off L.A. coast