Toronto Star

Baby dolphin dies after beachgoers swarm it

- AMY B WANG

A baby dolphin died last week after “hundreds” of beachgoers in southern Spain surrounded the animal to touch and take pictures with it, sparking condemnati­on from a local animal rescue group.

The incident took place last Friday in Mojacar, on the country’s southeaste­rn coast, according to Equinac, a Spanish non-profit organizati­on that advocates for marine wildlife.

According to posts on the group’s Facebook page, a baby dolphin that was stranded on the beach was surrounded by numerous people, including children, who wanted to touch and photograph it. Some accidental­ly covered the dolphin’s blowhole, the group said.

One person reported the stranded animal to the country’s emergency services number, but by the time Equinac rescuers arrived, the dolphin was dead, the group said.

“Once again we note that the human being is the most irrational species that exists,” Equinac wrote on Facebook Friday, the day of the incident, blasting the “selfishnes­s” of those that had swarmed the animal.

The group later clarified that the baby dolphin may have been isolated because it was sick or somehow separated from its mother. However, even though the beachgoers had not been responsibl­e for the dolphin’s stranding, merely touching and photograph­ing the animals can cause them to enter “a very high stress state” and, at worst, to experience fatal shock, the group said.

Those who see a stranded dolphin should call emergency rescue services rather than try to handle the animal, it added.

Equinac did not immediatel­y respond to a request for further comment Wednesday. In a subsequent Facebook post, the group said it had turned down media interview requests “because we are not interested in circuses.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada