China Daily (Hong Kong)

Four more rescued whales released

- By CHEN MEILING in Beijing and MA ZHENHUAN in Hangzhou Xinhua contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at chenmeilin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Four melon-headed whales rescued after being stranded this week in shallow coastal waters in Linhai, Zhejiang province, were released into the ocean on Wednesday night, experts said.

That took the number released to six, but two others died before they could be set free.

At 8 am on Tuesday, police received a report from villagers saying a dozen “big fish” were stranded hundreds of meters from shore. Experts then identified them as melon-headed whales, a Level II protected species in China.

Three of the 12 stranded whales died before the rescue team arrived. About 500 rescuers battled high temperatur­es as they worked for about 10 hours to move all of them off the mud flat by around 6 pm on Tuesday.

Experts said two whales sent to Baishawan Park that day were in good physical condition and were released into ocean waters at 9 pm on Tuesday.

Five were transferre­d to a fish farm in Taizhou and the other two were sent to Taizhou Ocean World.

Apart from one at the fish farm, the rescue team decided to release all the whales after considerin­g their health conditions. However, two whales died before they could be carried onto the ship.

“Though we made every effort to rescue the melon-headed whales, two died on the way to the wharf. The reason is being studied,” said Zhu Yupeng, head of Linhai’s marine and fisheries law enforcemen­t team.

The bodies of the two whales will be frozen and dealt with according to suggestion­s from experts. The remaining whale at the fish farm, which is in poor health, is being observed and treated.

Zhu, who joined the rescue effort on the first day, said that to keep the whales alive, the rescue team tried many approaches, such as digging out water pits, installing sunshade devices, cooling them with ice cubes, and constantly pouring water on them. Some workers held the whales’ heads out of the mud to allow them to breathe. They used cranes and big stretchers to move them.

Research into the species, commonly seen in coastal waters around the Philippine­s, Hawaii and Australia, is quite limited worldwide, Zhang Peijun, an associate research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Deep-sea Science and Engineerin­g, told a news conference on Tuesday.

Zhang said they mainly feed on creatures such as octopuses. The whales swim about 30 meters below the surface during the day and about 200 to 500 meters deep at night.

“Cetacean stranding is a common phenomenon with complicate­d and diverse causes, ranging from problems with the whales’ navigation systems to changes in the earth’s environmen­t. The reason for the stranding of the 12 whales is uncertain and needs further research,” he said, adding it is not common for such a big number of melon-headed whales to be stranded at the same time.

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