The Scotsman

Humpback whale gets out to sea after getting lost in crocodile river

- By ROD MCGUIRK newsdeskts@scotsman.com

A humpback whale has found its way back to sea weeks after getting lost in a murky, crocodile-infested river in northern Australia, while an estimated 270 pilot whales became stranded in the country’ s south.

There have been no previous recorded sightings of whales in remote East Alligator River in the Northern Territory’s World Heritage-listed Kakadu National Park.

No - one can explain why at least three of the blue water mammals ventured so deep inland in a river with little visibility. In a more common phenomenon, about 270 pilot whales were reported stranded yesterday on sandbars off Australia’s southern island of Tasmania.

In northern Australia, the last of the humpback whale trio managed to navigate its way through shallow channels at the broad river mouth and back into Van Die men Gulf over the weekend, Kakadu National Park manager Feach Moyle said. “It made its way out on the high tides and we’re pleased it appeared to be in good condition and not suffering any ill effects.”

Humpbacks follow the western Australian coast in their annual migration from the tropics to Antarctica.

A helicopter crew spotted the whale on Sunday six miles outside the river mouth, Northern Territory government whale and dolphin scientist Carol Palmer said.

“He or she looked really relaxed, was cleaning all the mud off itself actually, and we were just so relieved that this whale had actually made itself out of the East Alligator River,” Ms Palmer said.

A group of recreation­al sailors first spotted the lost trio on 2 September more than 12 miles from the river’s mouth.

Two of the whales had disappeare­d before wildlife authoritie­s arrived a week later.

“Hopefully, they’re on their way or he or she is on their way to Antarctica, that it’s calling out for its friends and it catches up with them, because now is the time when all our humpback whales in the Northern Territory waters actually start to head to Antarctica ,” Ms Palmer said.

It was a mystery why a whale would stray so far up a shallow river full of crocodiles.

“It could have been chased up by some big sharks, or maybe it was just a wrong turn,” Ms Palmer said.

Marine ecologist Jason Fowler was among the sailors aboard a catamaran who first saw the whale sin a relatively deep river bend. By the time government scientists responded, the remaining whale had moved downstream to a stretch of the river only 4m deep.

“It was coming up with mud all over it,” Fowler said.

Despite the river’ s name, there are no alligators in Australia. It was named after the river’ s many crocodiles by European explorers who apparently couldn’t tell the difference.

Authoritie­s thought the whale was too big to be attacked by crocodiles.

 ??  ?? 0 A humpback whale which had swum into the East Alligator River in Australia’s Northern Territorie­s returned to the ocean in Van Diemen Gulf yesterday
0 A humpback whale which had swum into the East Alligator River in Australia’s Northern Territorie­s returned to the ocean in Van Diemen Gulf yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom