Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Dead whale had fractured skull among many injuries

- By Wayne Parry

LONG BEACH TOWNSHIP, N.J.» A post-mortem examinatio­n of a whale that washed ashore on New Jersey’s Long Beach Island found that the animal had suffered numerous blunt force injuries including a fractured skull and vertebrae.

The Marine Mammal Stranding Center on Friday released observatio­ns from a necropsy done Thursday evening on the nearly 25foot juvenile male humpback whale that was found dead in Long Beach Township.

Sheila Dean, director of the center, said the whale was found to have bruising around the head; multiple fractures of the skull and cervical vertebrae; numerous dislocated ribs, and a dislocated shoulder bone.

“These injuries are consistent with blunt force trauma,” she wrote in a posting on the group’s Facebook page.

Reached afterward, Dean would not attribute the injuries to any particular cause, noting that extensive testing as part of the necropsy remains to be done, with tissue samples sent to laboratori­es across the country.

“We only report what we see,” she said.

The animal’s cause of death is of intense interest to many amid an ongoing controvers­y involving a belief by opponents of offshore wind power that site preparatio­n work for the projects is harming or killing whales along the U.S. East Coast.

Numerous scientific agencies, including the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion; the Marine Mammal Commission; the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and the New Jersey Department of Environmen­tal Protection, say there is no evidence linking offshore wind preparatio­n to whale deaths.

NOAA did not respond to requests Thursday and Friday for updated death totals.

The stranding center’s website said this was New Jersey’s first whale death of the year, following 14 in 2023.

Leading Light Wind is one of three wind farms proposed off the New Jersey coast. It said in a statement issued late Thursday that “our community should guard against misinforma­tion campaigns in response to these incidents,” noting that many of the previous whale deaths have been attributed by scientists to vessel strikes or entangleme­nt with fishing gear.

Protect Our Coast NJ, one of the most staunchly anti-offshore wind groups, voiced renewed skepticism of official pronouncem­ents on the whale deaths, referencin­g similar distrust from some quarters of official informatio­n regarding the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Blaming all of the cetacean deaths on entangleme­nts and ship strikes is reminiscen­t of the phenomenon four years ago in which seemingly every death was a COVID death, no matter how old or how sick the patient was prior to contractin­g the virus,” the group said in a statement Thursday.

Leading Light, whose project would be built about 40 miles off Long Beach Island, said it is committed to building the project in a way that minimizes risks to wildlife.

“Minimizing impacts to the marine environmen­t is of the utmost importance to Leading Light Wind,” leaders of the project said. “Along with providing advance notices about our survey activity and facilitati­ng active engagement with maritime stakeholde­rs, Leading Light Wind is investing in monitoring and mitigation initiative­s to ensure the offshore wind industry can thrive alongside a healthy marine environmen­t.”

 ?? WAYNE PARRY - THE ASSOCIATED
PRESS ?? A dead humpback whale in the surf on New Jersey’s Long Beach Island on Thursday. On Friday, a marine animal rescue group said the whale had many blunt force injuries.
WAYNE PARRY - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A dead humpback whale in the surf on New Jersey’s Long Beach Island on Thursday. On Friday, a marine animal rescue group said the whale had many blunt force injuries.

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