Lethbridge Herald

Rescuers plan helicopter airlift of orca calf stranded in B.C. lagoon

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Plans are now underway to airlift a stranded killer whale calf out of a remote tidal lagoon off northern Vancouver Island in an effort to reunite the young orca with its extended family.

Fisheries Department and First Nations officials say the plans involve placing the two-year-old calf into a sling, lifting it out of the lagoon by helicopter and putting it in a holding net pen in the ocean while they wait until its family pod is nearby before the young orca is released.

The plan was agreed on Wednesday during a meeting between members of the Ehattesaht First Nation council, Fisheries Department officials and marine technical experts.

Ehattesaht First Nation Chief Simon John said his people have deep cultural and spiritual connection­s to killer whales and the nation has been receiving calls of concern and support from around the world.

“Everybody’s worried about the whale up and down the coast,” he said after the meeting. “This whole process has been to reunite it with its pod.”

Paul Cottrell, a marine mammal co-ordinator with the Fisheries Department, said the rescue could occur within days, but more likely within the next two weeks.

“We look at this option as the most viable option to helping this whale,” said Cottrell during the meeting at the First Nation office.

“Everybody is rooting for us. If we don’t attempt it, the calf’s life is a worry.”

Cottrell said time is of the essence for the calf. They’ll be working quickly to put the plan in place, look at how they’ll capture and transport the calf and then, hopefully, reunite it with its pod as it passes.

Rescue officials have been trying to coax the two-year-old orca calf to pass through a narrow, swift-moving channel leading to the open ocean since its mother died. She was stranded when the tide went out in the lagoon.

A necropsy later showed she was pregnant with a female calf.

“I’ve been involved in a lot of whale rescues and other marine mammal rescues in this in terms of the complexiti­es and variables with it being a tidal lagoon, an orphaned calf, a threatened species, I’ve never been involved in such a complex operation (that is) multivaria­ble and really difficult,” Cottrell said.

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