SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

More than 150 whales stranded on beach in remote north-western Tasmania | Whales

More than 150 whales are stuck on a beach near the Arthur River on the remote northwest coast of Tasmania.

A group of 157 animals, which look like fake murder whales, have been left behind, according to Tasmania, of the Natural Resources and Environment Agency.

Marine conservation experts, including wildlife veterinarians, arrived at the site Wednesday morning to confirm that 90 animals were still alive.

“Our mass surveillance events usually include pilot whales. But these are the false killer whales and the first mass chain of these animals in about 50 years,” says Tasmania Parks and Wildlife Services liaison officer Brendon Clark said at a press conference held in Hobart on Wednesday morning. “They are now left behind for 24-48 hours.”

“The initial assessment shows that it is difficult to implant whales due to the site's inaccessibility, marine conditions and the challenges of delivering special equipment to remote locations,” Clark said.

“We have roughly 200 metres of tide water, broken surf, so it would be difficult to try and get the animals back directly back to that surf,” he says, and that's a rescue worker. It would pose a safety risk to the

“At this stage, we don't know why these animals are stuck,” he said, adding that helicopter reconnaissance suggested there were no other animals on the beach 10 km on either side of the strike site. I did.

Authorities highlighted the state's active wildfires on the west coast, urging the public to avoid supervisory areas.

“If it is determined that we need help from the public, requests will be made through various paths,” the Environment Department said in a statement.

“, “iStracking “: true,” ismainmedia “: false, “source “:” facebook “, “sourcedomain “:” facebook.com “}”>

Do you allow Facebook content?

This article contains content provided by Facebook. You may be using cookies or other technologies, so you will ask for permission before anything is loaded. To view this content, Click “Get permission and continue.”.

“All whales are protected species, even if they once died, and it's a crime to block a body.”

The answer to the tasmanian environmental department's trickery is led to the “cecetacean case manual,” which was reviewed following the overseer of Australia's worst mass whale in 2020. The incident involved more than 450 long Finn pilot whales on the beach in Macquarie Port on the west coast of Tasmania.

Skip past newsletter promotions

Two massive chains in Tasmania's waters also occurred within a week in September 2022.

Clark said: Use the same rescue techniques. ”

“These onsites do triage to determine which animals are most likely to survive. We implement them… until we determine if they could become regenerative. Implement a way to keep you alive and comfortable.

He said that in June 1974, mass surveillance of a final fake killer whales occurred on Black River Beach near Stanley on Tasmania's northwest coast. The incident also included pods of 160-170 animals.

The fake killer whales, despite their common name, are highly sociable dolphin species. Animals that grow to approximately 6 meters long form large pods that predispose large amounts of strands.

Clark said the false killer whales can weigh from 500kg to 3 tons.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News