TV Reporter: “Woah! Dead whales!” Record high number of deaths in Hawaii
- “Carcasses scattered throughout islands” in Pacific
- Sick and starving animals a ‘mystery’ to experts
- “Possible health effects” from Fukushima radiation off coast (VIDEO)
5 February, 2017
KGMB, Jan 17, 2017 (emphasis added): Wildlife officials investigate record number of humpback whale deaths… Six humpback whale carcasses have washed up onto Hawaii shores since November. That’s double the number typically found in a season, which runs from November to May… The previous record for the number of whale carcasses found in Hawaii waters was in 2013, when five dead whales were found. Biologists aren’t sure what’s behind the increase in deaths. “It is higher than usual. It’s almost double this early in the season for what we’d get in a whole season,” said [NOAA's] David Schofield… Since November, whale carcasses have been scattered throughout the main Hawaiian islands… Biologists are investigating to see if the whales starved or if there’s a problem with the ocean’s health… officials will be meeting with partners inAlaska and Washington D.C. to investigate further.
KGMB
reporter Mahealani Richardson,
Jan 17, 2017:Woah!
Dead whales! Wildlife officials are investigating a mystery over a
record number of humpback whale deaths
Other
recent whale deaths in Hawaii
KHON,
Nov 22, 2016: Beached
melon-headed whale euthanized on Maui…
“The body condition was significantly compromised…” said marine
mammal response specialist Aliza Milette-Winfree… a
necropsy will be done to determine what made it sick.
KHON,
Oct 23, 2016: Necropsy results are in for a pregnant
dwarf sperm whale found dead on
Maui’s Makena shoreline… this is very unusual because these
whales normally live in deep waters… samples have been sent to the
mainland to see if the whale also had any diseases… [NOAA] reported
that a witness
saw two small whales stranded in
Makena…
AP,
Aug 26, 2016: Hawaii humpback whale experts are reporting the
sighting of a sickly
humpback whale off
Maui. [NOAA's] Malia Chow said Friday the animal
is emaciated and covered in whale lice…
She says the
animal’s poor condition is a mystery.
Hakai
Magazine,
May 25, 2016: No-Show
Pacific Ocean Humpbacks Stump Scientists…
Whaleresearchers
from around the Pacific are
reporting that far
fewer whales showed up in
their usual wintering grounds… [NOAA's Ed Lyman] says he
started noticing changes in December 2015… [He] was getting calls
from tour boat operators asking where the whales were.
“Something
happened this year,”
agrees Jim Darling, a researcher with the nonprofit Whale Trust Maui.
“It
almost seemed as if the females didn’t bother to show up”…
the density
of cows and calves was especially low…
Darling also reported hearing from colleagues in the Philippines
and Japan
of similarly low whale numbers…
Also striking
was the low number of calves…
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, also saw fewer whales than normal says Oscar
Frey, an oceanographer… he observed “the
least number of mothers with babies that I have ever seen.”
How
about in 2017?
The
Garden Island,
Jan 30, 2017: Annual
whale count…
[Jean Souza, HINMS Kauai programs coordinator] said the Kauai sites…
saw an average
of four whale viewings within
a 15-minute time count period… down
from the six sightings of the 2016 count.
Dr.
Ken Buesseler, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution,
Jan 7, 2017: “We know there can be health effects from exposure to
any amount of radiation… the highest level we’ve seen north
of Hawaii is 10 Becquerels per cubic meter. Swimming
through that for eight hours a day for an entire year could have
possible health effects,
but that additional dose is one thousand times smaller than a single
dental X-ray.”
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