The Arizona Republic

Endangered baby whale found dead in Fla.

- Bobcaina Calvan

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. – The plight of endangered right whales took another sad turn Saturday, when a baby whale, possibly 2 months old, washed ashore dead on a Florida beach with telltale signs of being struck by a boat.

There are fewer than 400 north Atlantic right whales remaining, and any mortality of the species is a serious setback to rescuing the animals from extinction, according to federal biologists who expressed dismay over Saturday’s discovery of the 22-foot male infant at Anastasia State Park near St. Augustine.

“This is a very sad event,” said Blair Mase, a whale expert with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

“Every mortality that occurs really has a devastatin­g impact on the population as a whole, because they are one of our most critically endangered whales in the world. Every whale counts.”

The infant whale is believed to be the first born of a 19-year-old whale biologists named Infinity. Both were sighted off Amelia Island in northern Florida on Jan. 17.

The circumstan­ces surroundin­g the whale’s death are under investigat­ion. But federal officials said it was clear that a vessel was involved. The whale suffered propeller wounds to the head and back.

Inclement weather kept biologists from immediatel­y launching a search for the calf ’s mother to see if she might have also been injured by the collision with a boat.

It was the second calf mortality since the calving season. Another calf was found dead in November on one of North Carolina’s barrier islands.

From November to April, right whales swim south from the frigid northern Atlantic to give birth in warmer waters off the northern coast of Florida.

The whales spend those months cruising through waters off the coast, sometimes coming within a couple hundred feet from beaches, making them vulnerable to boaters and fishing vessels going in and out of piers.

Mase said some 40 right whales have been sighted off the southeast coast of the United States, with 15 pairs of moms and their calves.

 ?? MEG POTTER/THE REPUBLIC ?? Priscilla Ochoa , left, and Adiel Montiel celebrate Valentine’s Day at Steele Indian School Park in Phoenix on Sunday.
MEG POTTER/THE REPUBLIC Priscilla Ochoa , left, and Adiel Montiel celebrate Valentine’s Day at Steele Indian School Park in Phoenix on Sunday.

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