Daily Press

Dead OBX whale likely tangled in fishing gear

Young humpback washed ashore on Pea Island beach

- By Corinne Saunders Staff writer

RODANTHE — The dead humpback whale that washed up Tuesday on the beach of Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge was a 31 ½-foot juvenile female that likely died from impacts of fishing gear entangleme­nt, according to a National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion spokespers­on.

“An entangled humpback whale was first reported to the stranding network on the evening of Saturday, April 13, swimming about 150 yards offshore of Rodanthe, North Carolina,” Allison Garrett, a communicat­ions specialist with NOAA Fisheries/U.S. Department of Commerce, said in a Wednesday email.

“The next morning, a local fisherman saw and reported the whale alive and entangled in fishing gear working off the coast of Rodanthe. Unfortunat­ely, while in the process of NOAA providing guidance to the fisherman to aid the whale, the whale died.”

The whale washed up on the north end of Pea Island “with fishing gear entangled around a pectoral fin and in its mouth,” where National Park Service personnel found it Tuesday morning, she said.

Pea Island is on the northern end of Hatteras Island.

A necropsy was being conducted Wednesday, according to Garrett.

“It is likely that the whale died from the impacts of the entangleme­nt,” she said.

The juvenile humpback is the fourth whale to wash up on Outer Banks beaches in a little over a month and the seventh between northeaste­rn North Carolina and southeaste­rn Virginia.

Two humpback whales washed up March 3 and 4 in Virginia Beach, continuing a long-term trend of elevated mortalitie­s since 2016, according to NOAA experts.

Scars indicated both had been entangled.

A 26-foot female minke whale was found dead March 5 on the fourwheel drive beach north of Corolla. That whale showed evidence of infectious disease, but the type remains unknown.

Minke whale deaths have also been high in recent years for reasons that could include human interactio­n and infectious disease, but NOAA reported that more research is needed.

A pregnant dwarf sperm whale that washed up March 8 near Barnes Street in Nags Head had an intact 2-foot fetus, which is shy of full term. The cause of death is unclear.

Officials presumed that a male juvenile dwarf sperm whale that washed up the same day just north of Jennette’s Pier in Nags Head was the pregnant whale’s offspring and was too young to survive alone.

Dwarf sperm whales are found in temperate and tropical seas worldwide, according to the NOAA website. The species is “poorly known due to the limited availabili­ty of informatio­n and their cryptic appearance at sea,” the website said.

On March 30, an endangered North Atlantic right whale was found dead offshore near Back Bay National Wildlife Refuge in Virginia Beach.

A necropsy report released earlier this month cited “catastroph­ic injuries” and vertebrae fractures that are “consistent with blunt force trauma from a vessel strike prior to death.”

Additional testing of samples from the right whale was still pending.

 ?? CAPE HATTERAS NATIONAL SEASHORE ?? Cape Hatteras National Seashore personnel found a dead humpback whale Tuesday morning on the north end of Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge.
CAPE HATTERAS NATIONAL SEASHORE Cape Hatteras National Seashore personnel found a dead humpback whale Tuesday morning on the north end of Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge.

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