is reporting from
Member
NP Rank:
NP Rank:
This is such a great story. A marine mammal expert in New Zealand calls it an "interspecies refloating technique" but I call it amazing.
RAY LILLEY
The Associated Press
March 12, 2008 at 8:26 AM EDT
WELLINGTON — Most days, Moko the bottlenosed dolphin, swims playfully with humans at a New Zealand beach.
But this week, it seems, Moko found his mojo.
Witnesses described Wednesday how they saw the dolphin swim up to two stranded whales and guide them to safety.
Before Moko arrived, rescue workers had been working for more than an hour to get two pygmy sperm whales, a mother and her calf, back out to sea after they were stranded Monday off Mahia Beach, Conservation Department worker Malcolm Smith said.
But Mr. Smith said the whales restranded themselves four times on a sandbar slightly out to sea from the beach, about 480 kilometres northeast of the capital, Wellington. It looked likely they would have to be euthanized to prevent a prolonged death, he said.
“They kept getting disoriented and stranding again,” said Mr. Smith, who was among the rescuers. “They obviously couldn't find their way back past (the sandbar) to the sea.”
Then along came Moko, who approached the whales and appeared to lead them as they swam 200 metres along the beach and through a channel out to the open sea.
“Moko just came flying through the water and pushed in between us and the whales,” Juanita Symes, another rescuer, told The Associated Press. “She got them to head toward the hill, where the channel is. It was an amazing experience.”
Anton van Helden, a marine mammals expert at New Zealand's national museum, Te Papa Tongarewa, said the reports of Moko's rescue were “fantastic” but believable, because the dolphins have “a great capacity for altruistic activities.”
These included evidence of dolphins protecting people lost at sea, and their playfulness with other animals.
“But it's the first time I've heard of an inter-species refloating technique. I think that's wonderful,” said Mr. van Helden, who was not involved in the rescue but spoke afterward to Mr. Smith.
Photo: Voyage Mahia website
Add a comment
Comments (1)
at 14:17 on March 12th, 2008
Hello Ppeggy,
In a world set for more war, the U.S., preparing for depression and all manner of horror stories in the news, this story is like a breath of fresh air.
I love dolphins - their intelligence has been touted all over the world. I read a science-fiction book a long time ago written by Raymond E. Feist - or was it Orson Scott Card, (two of my favorite SF authors!) called .... (ughh I can't remember the name) it was about dolphins and how they were employed by humans in the future.
Thank you for sharing this story with us, I really enjoyed it. :)
~ Swan