NP Rank:
Tasmania: Pilot Whales Die in Mass Stranding
Update: The
52 pilot whales found themselves stranded on a remote Tasmanian beach, and only 13 are still alive.
Local wildlife services staff are mobilising their own resources as well as bringing in outside help in order to free the surviving whales and deal with the carcasses of those that didn't make it.
The whales came ashore yesterday on a high tide at little-used Anthony's Beach, near Stanley. Most were dead before they were found by a woman walking her dog, who called wildlife officials.
The whales were discovered by a member of the public at Stanley on the island's north-west coast, local parks manager Chris Arthur said in a statement.
An attempt would be made to rescue the surviving animals on Sunday, he said.
"We have equipment and whale rescue trailers coming from around the state," Arthur said.
Most Recommended Comment
Crowd Power
-
tansyjefferies
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States -
josiemitchell
Vancouver, Canada -
Nikki and Jason
Groton, Connecticut, United States -
dclayton50
Canada -
jan10us
Netherlands -
kscherer11
Long Valley, New Jersey, United States
Recommendations (26)
-
Uwe Paschen
Narita, Chiba, Japan -
Rhonda J Mangus
North Tonawanda, New York, United States -
Blue Crush
Toronto, Canada -
danesller0127
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia -
Pythiian1
New York, New York, United States
-
jjenet
Ilford, Essex, United Kingdom -
kate
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada -
happybrunette23
kuala lumpur, Malaysia -
Milieunet
Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands












Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (16)
at 11:23 on November 22nd, 2008
This is so sad, I wonder if these pilot whales were upset from the ocean's activity before the earthquake in nearby region.
at 18:37 on November 22nd, 2008
what!!! Get real.
This is an area where strandings are almost an annual occurrence
at 18:41 on November 22nd, 2008
Well not everyone would know that, hence why she stated 'I wonder'...
at 22:10 on November 22nd, 2008
then it was a meaningless comment that added nothing to the story - the implication was there had been some event to trigger it and as there evidently was not, she made one up.
at 22:18 on November 22nd, 2008
As a wrangler, we expect better conduct towards other members, not comments about how their contribution was a meaningless one. If you choose to ignore this suggestion, then you will lose your wrangler status.
at 04:18 on November 23rd, 2008
Amy - I was an editor long before you came onto the scene and was part of writing much of what is "Now Public" including the guidelines.
So I feel comfortable in knowing that meaningless comments are a waste, as are inaccurate 'facts' in comments and that comments are the place to say so.
So please don't threaten me - I do not react well to them and will pursue it if needed.
at 11:50 on November 22nd, 2008
Oh! no, I'm sorry to heared that, It's sad story for the whales... calling WWF!!!
at 14:45 on November 22nd, 2008
These whales are endangered enough as it is - that is so sad and not fair.
at 18:44 on November 22nd, 2008
Now amy - get facts before spouting (pun) untruths.
"pilot whales are not considered to be endangered. There are likely to be almost a million long-finned pilot whales and at least 200,000 short-finned pilot whales worldwide." (American Cetacean Society)
at 18:56 on November 22nd, 2008
You're right - they're not endangered - I stand corrected.
at 18:50 on November 22nd, 2008
They may not yet be on the official endangered List, however at the rate we are going and the way we manage Nature and natural resources it won't be long before they will be endangered and we may very well follow them some time down the road.
at 08:24 on November 23rd, 2008
This is sad, although it is nature
at 23:07 on November 25th, 2008
exactly - the natural order of things.
at 09:43 on November 23rd, 2008
OMG, that's horrible, losing more whales are not going help balance the eco system... is it because of the 7.5 magnitude earthquake in Sumatra that did not become a Tsunami?? Well according to ur news it's brought to Tasmanian beach because of the high tide???....
at 23:06 on November 25th, 2008
no and err no.
at 12:03 on November 28th, 2008
11 rescued pilot whales have rejoined a larger pod offshore:
Source: msnbc.msn.com