The Guardian Australia

44 pilot whales rescued and returned to sea after mass stranding at Tasmanian beach

- Graham Readfearn

A mission to rescue scores of pilot whales found still alive on a beach after a mass stranding on Tasmania’s west coast has ended with 44 of the animals towed back into the ocean.

Preliminar­y data from satellite trackers on two of the rescued pilot whales – which are actually large oceanic dolphins – show they are now “well south” of Tasmania.

More than 230 pilot whales were reported stranded at Ocean Beach, west of Strahan, last Wednesday but more than 170 were already dead when rescuers arrived.

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State government personnel and volunteers from the community and the local salmon farming industry worked alongside vets to rescue the animals, towing them one-by-one into waters off the coast.

Almost 200 dead whales were tied together and on Sunday pulled out into the ocean, where authoritie­s said they were expected to drift south, though some could float ashore. Two carcasses remain on the beach.

Preliminar­y data from satellite tackers on two of the rescued whales showed they were now swimming well south of Tasmania.

Nic Deka, the incident controller for the rescue, said: “This is positive news as this indicates that many of the rescued whales have been successful­ly released back into the Southern Ocean.”

Deka thanked colleagues from the Department of Natural Resources and Environmen­t Tasmania, as well as salmon industry staff, volunteers and the Strahan community and local council for their help. Access roads have reopened.

Authoritie­s warned carcasses could wash up in the coming weeks and surveillan­ce flights would be monitoring nearby beaches.

The stranding came two years to the day after the biggest recorded mass whale or dolphin stranding in Australia at the same location. 470 pilot whales were found in Macquarie Harbour and on Ocean Beach.

Experts say the cause of the stranding may never be known. But the coastline near Strahan is known as a “whale trap” because of the frequency of strandings there.

Tissue samples were taken and necropsies carried out on the dead whales to rule out any unnatural causes for the deaths.

But it was thought that some of the whales in the pod may have been drawn in, away from the deeper waters where they live, either because of sickness or to chase squid.

Once close to the shore, the sloping beach can confuse the whales’ echolocati­on. Because the whales can communicat­e with each other, and form strong social bonds, experts said this could have seen hundreds follow the disoriente­d or sick whales.

Authoritie­s asked for any sightings of stranded whales or carcasses in the region to be reported to a whale hotline at 0427 WHALES.

 ?? Photograph: Glenn Nicholls/AFP/Getty Images ?? Preliminar­y data satellite trackers on released pilot whales who stranded on a beach in Tasmania show the rescued animals have successful­ly headed ‘well south’ into the ocean.
Photograph: Glenn Nicholls/AFP/Getty Images Preliminar­y data satellite trackers on released pilot whales who stranded on a beach in Tasmania show the rescued animals have successful­ly headed ‘well south’ into the ocean.

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