Detroit Free Press

Humpback whale swims 3,000 miles with broken back

- Natalie Neysa Alund

In “considerab­le pain,” a determined humpback whale tracked by researcher­s for more than a decade, recently finished swimming more than 3,000 miles from Canada to Hawaii – all with a broken spine.

Moon, a lone humpback whale, traveled from British Columbia to Maui with a severe spinal injury from a vessel strike, according to a post the nonprofit research group BC Whales shared on Facebook.

The whale was spotted in waters near the Hawaiian island Dec. 1.

She was immediatel­y identified because of her contorted body which researcher­s said is due to it being struck by a vessel.

Every September for the past decade, researcher­s at Fin Island research station in Gitga’at First Nations territory spotted Moon in the coastal waters to feed on krill.

In 2020, researcher­s said they were elated when she appeared with a calf, passing on the tradition of migrating between feeding and breeding grounds to her offspring. But in September, researcher­s noticed something else.

“The harrowing images of her twisted body stirred us all,” BC Whales posted Thursday on Facebook. “She was likely in considerab­le pain yet she migrated thousands of miles without being able to propel herself with her tail.”

The whale’s journey left her emaciated and covered in whale lice as a testament to her severely depreciate­d condition, researcher­s said.

“This is the stark reality of a vessel strike, and it speaks to the extended suffering that whales can endure afterwards,” they wrote. “It also speaks to their instinct and culture: the lengths whales will go to follow patterns of behavior.”

Janie Wray, the CEO and lead researcher for BC Whales, told The Guardian that Moon’s injury meant the whale had to swim differentl­y to finish her journey.

“Without the use of her tail, she was literally doing the breaststro­ke to make that migration. It’s absolutely amazing,” she told the outlet. “But it also just breaks your heart.”

Attempts to euthanize Moon, Wray said, would require “a cocktail of toxic substances” and risk poisoning the marine life that would feed off her remains.

“If she was on land, we could intervene,”

Wray told the outlet. “But because she’s in the ocean, and because of her size, there is nothing that we can do. And that just breaks your heart even further into pieces.”

Wray could not immediatel­y be reached for comment by USA TODAY.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, marine animals can be difficult for a vessel operator to see because they are not always visible from the surface. Even if the operator sees the animal clearly, there may be no time for either of them to avoid a collision.

Endangered North Atlantic right whales are especially vulnerable to vessel strikes because their habitat and migration routes are close to major ports and often overlap with shipping lanes, the administra­tion said.

Researcher­s said Moon’s condition will not allow her to survive the return to Canada.

 ?? PROVIDED BY BC WHALES ?? Moon, a humpback whale, traveled from British Columbia to Hawaii with a severe spinal injury from a vessel strike but will likely not make it back, researcher­s said.
PROVIDED BY BC WHALES Moon, a humpback whale, traveled from British Columbia to Hawaii with a severe spinal injury from a vessel strike but will likely not make it back, researcher­s said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States