March 2, 2009

Dozens of Whales & Dolphins Stranded on Australian Island! God PLEASE Cause The Tide To Come In FAST So That They Can Return To Their Natural Habitat


Reuters
Reporting by Rob Taylor, editing by Sanjeev Miglani
Mon Mar 2, 2009 4:13am EST

CANBERRA (Reuters) - Rescuers were trying on Monday to save dozens of pilot whales after almost 200 beached themselves on an island near Australia's southern state of Tasmania, with many already dead.

Rescuers said only 54 of the 194 pilot whales who stranded themselves on King Island, between Tasmania and the Australian mainland, late Sunday were still alive.

But wildlife authorities were confident that those who had survived the beaching could be saved. Seven dolphins also beached themselves.

"It's amazing, some will die straight away, some will survive for days. These are fairly robust animals, pilot whales, we experienced that in the past," Chris Arthur, from Tasmania's Parks and Wildlife Service, told Australian state radio.

"While they're alive there is a chance," he said.

The latest mass beaching takes the number of whales stranded in Tasmania's northwest over the past three months to more than 400, and follows the deaths of 48 sperm whales in January. Mass strandings of whales occur periodically in Australia and New Zealand for reasons that are not entirely understood.

Theories include disturbance of echo-location, possibly by interference from sound produced by human activities at sea.

Arthur said more than 150 local people were helping parks officials in trying to refloat the surviving whales from a flat stretch of sand at Naracoopa beach and shepherd them back to sea, where a large number of whales were still milling in a pod.

"Families, children, mums and dads, grandparents all here helping out doing their bit under the guidance of a local parks ranger," King Island Council General Manager Andrew Wardlaw told local radio.

Weather bureau officials said the rescue effort could be complicated by strong winds expected to bring rougher sea conditions.

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The Mercury Australia
Written by Helen Kempton
March 02, 2009 01:55pm

"The locals have got everything ready and now the professionals have arrived. I am hoping we have the manpower to save the animals."

John Nievaart, from Naracoopa Holiday Units, is one of the volunteers who has spent the morning trying to save the mammals.

"It is pretty darn sad, you can hear them crying," he said.

"There are as many volunteers as whales down here. We are keeping them wet and have got them covered with anything we could get our hands on, bedspreads, blankets and towels.

"It was heartbreaking to watch." Mr Nievaart said excavators had dug channels ready for the incoming tide.

A naval vessel was using sonar at the time of some of the strandings.

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