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  • 27
    Dec
    2012
    1:51pm, EST

    Officials: Endangered whale dies after getting stranded on NYC beach

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    NEW YORK -- An emaciated 60-foot finback whale that washed up on a coastal community devastated by Superstorm Sandy has died, marine officials said Thursday.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    The whale was found beached Wednesday in Breezy Point, Queens, where 126 homes burned down and more than 2,000 were damaged during the Oct. 29 storm. It was carried out at high tide but washed ashore another time on Thursday, and marine officials said they found it dead, according to media reports.

    “Biologists have confirmed that the whale has died,” Mendy Garron, a marine mammal rescue specialist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, told Reuters. “Plans are currently being developed for necropsy and disposal of the carcass."


    PhotoBlog: Finback whale beached at Breezy Point

    Finback whales are an endangered species. They are second in size only to the blue whale, and can reach up to 70 feet in length and weigh up to 70 tons. The whales migrate to equatorial waters in the fall and during winter, they mostly fast, surviving on their fat reserves. Winter is also when they mate, and calves are born one year later, according to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.


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    It is one of the fastest large whales and can stay underwater for up to 50 minutes on one breath.

    Tim Dufficy, 26, a member of the Point Breeze Volunteer Fire Department, said the firehouse was contacted by security in the private cooperative about the animal. He and a few other volunteers took some new equipment, such as a portable pump and a special hose, that they'd gotten in the aftermath of the storm to keep water flowing on the whale during low tide since it was mostly out of the water.

    "Everyone was hoping," he told NBC News. "But ... we knew the prospects were grim."

    The whale did respond to the firefighters efforts, opening its eyes and moving its tails and side fins, he said. The fire crew eventually left the animal in the care of marine biologists. When Dufficy went to check back on the whale on Thursday, it had drifted seven blocks down the beach.

    Rob DiGiovanni, executive director of the Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation told NBCNewYork.com on Wednesday that the whale was “severely emaciated” and that the outcome did not look good.

    Calls placed Thursday seeking comment to the foundation and NOAA were not immediately returned.

    The whale was found on the bay side of the community, which is tucked in by the Atlantic Ocean and Jamaica Bay. With most homes rendered uninhabitable by the storm, many residents have had to move away and make daily trips to continue repairs.

    Sharks, dolphins and a large sea turtle have also turned up on the beaches of Breezy Point, which was founded more than a century ago by Irish immigrants. It's not clear how many survived, said Dufficy, though he knew the sea turtle was alive when marine officials took it away.

    A whale also beached itself on the community's Atlantic coast around the summer of 1960, said Point Breeze Fire Chief Marty Ingram.

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    46 comments

    Sad to see such a magnificent animal lost. Stop ocean dumping. Stop the flow of pollutants into the seas. The Oceans are an incredibly important part of the biosphere, and must be protected. If the Oceans die, we die.

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    Explore related topics: new-york, stranded, beached, whale, marine, queens, finback
  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    3:15am, EST

    Authorities probe report of swimmer riding sperm whale that died off Fla. coast

    View more videos at: http://nbcmiami.com.

    By Juan Ortega and Donna Rapado, NBCMiami.com

    A sperm whale that was drifting off an eastern Florida shore on Sunday has died, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    The agency now plans to look into a report from a resident of Pompano Beach, north of Fort Lauderdale, who said she saw the whale alive earlier in the day and saw one of two swimmers get on top of the whale, NOAA said. 

    "This whale was likely ill or injured and that is why it came in so close to shore," said Blair Mase, NOAA's southeast regional stranding coordinator. "This type of harassment could have caused more harm and added stress to an already stressed whale and ultimately caused its demise."

    It is a federal offense to harass a marine mammal, Mase said.


    "People need to be aware that they shouldn't do that," she said.

    Sperm whales, the largest of the toothed whales, also are an endangered species, she said.

    Read more news on NBCMiami.com

    Marine scientist Stefan Harzen said it's possible a boat struck the whale or something simply made the whale sick.

    "There's really very little you can do for a whale if it gets seriously ill or injured," he said.

    On its 'last leg'
    The witness, Margie Casey, 49, told NBC 6 that she saw two swimmers twice go up to the whale Sunday morning. She said she watched them from her fifth-floor balcony and snapped photos of one swimmer getting on the whale.

    Casey said the whale at the time was drifting north along the shore, just south of a stretch of beach near the Northeast 14th Street Causeway.


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    Casey said she considered the whale to be alive, because it was flapping its tail at the time. Perhaps the whale was on its "last leg," she said. "So sad."

    About 11:45 a.m., bystanders reported the whale was about 40 feet from the shore, according to sheriff's spokeswoman Veda Coleman-Wright.

    A marine mammal rescue team, the Broward Sheriff's Office and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission responded.

    US sued over Navy sonar tests in whale waters

    Before it was announced the whale had died, beachgoers said they hoped the whale would survive.

    "I think it's totally amazing, man," said Brad Schwab. "It looks like they're trying to keep him out in the open sea."

    Beachgoer Dennis Cooper added, "I guess everybody's concerned about the health of the whale and everybody's trying to save it."

    Christina Coniglio, who was also on the beach, said she suspected that pollution contributed to the whale's illness.

    "The environment is so dirty," she said. "When the whales go and eat all those plastics and bottles and things we throw in the sea, they get sick and this is what happens."

    The whale had been coming close to shore while rip currents kept pulling it back out, Coleman-Wright said. When officials arrived, a specialist went into the water and determined the species that died was a sperm whale, Mase said.

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    229 comments

    What can i say on this one other than what an idiot.

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    Explore related topics: endangered, miami, swimmer, beached, whale, featured, sperm-whale, pompano-beach, nbcmiami-com

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