Cape Argus

Stranded whales swim back to sea

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SYDNEY: New Zealand conservati­on authoritie­s said 240 pilot whales that had been stranded overnight at a remote bay that only days earlier had a larger beaching, refloated themselves yesterday and were swimming offshore.

“We had 240 whales strand yesterday in the afternoon and we were fearful we were going to end up with 240 dead whales this morning,” said Herb Christophe­rs, a Department of Conservati­on spokespers­on.

“But they self-rescued, in other words the tide came in and they were able to float off and swim out to sea.”

The pod was the second large group to strand itself in recent days at Golden Bay, at the north-west tip of the South Island, in one of the worst mass strandings in New Zealand.

On Thursday evening, a conservati­on worker spotted about 400 whales that had washed ashore. Hundreds of volunteers spent days pouring water over the beached whales to try and keep them cool, while waiting to catch high tides to carry them out to sea again.

But most of the whales from that pod died. Officials would soon have to start clearing the carcasses, Christophe­rs said.

The strandings have been New Zealand’s largest in decades.

The precise cause was not known, though beached whales are not uncommon at Golden Bay.

Its shallow muddy waters confuse the marine mammals’ sonar, leaving them vulnerable to stranding by an ebb tide, according to marine environmen­tal organisati­on Project Jonah.

Pilot whales are not listed as endangered, but little is known about their population in New Zealand waters. – Reuters

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