Beached whale
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A beached whale is a whale which has become stranded on land, usually on a beach. Beaching is often fatal for whales, as they become dehydrated and die. Some die when their lungs are suffocated under their own weight or drown when high tides cover their blowholes. Humans sometimes try to save beached whales; however, such efforts are not always successful.
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Causes
The cause of beaching is not definitively known. However, there is some evidence that anti-submarine warfare sonar and other underwater noises (such as those emitted from oil drills) are of a sufficient intensity to cause the whales to surface too rapidly. The whales suffer hemorrhaging and decompression sickness due to the rapid pressure change. The resulting disorientation could then cause the whale to become beached.
Ken Balcomb, a zoologist, specializing in the study of whales, particularly the Orcas populations that inhabit the Strait of Juan de Fuca between Washington and Vancouver Island, has investigated mass beachings of whales. In March 2000, he investigated a mass beaching of beaked whales in his study population stranded near his Bahamas field station following a U.S. Navy sonar exercise. The specimens he collected provided the first evidence of pressure traumas that can be “caused” by sonar, although the precise mechanism for damage is still unknown.
It is also controversially theorized that beachings could be suicide attempts by whales, perhaps to end some suffering. Those theories are based on the assumption that whales are highly intelligent animals capable of planning their own deaths.Template:Fact
Another controversial theory, researched by Jim Berkland, a former Geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, attributes the strange behavior to radical changes in the Earth's magnetic field just prior to earthquakes and in the general area of earthquakes. He says when this occurs, it interferes with sea mammals and even migratory birds ability to navigate, which explains the mass beachings. He says even dogs and cats can sense the disruptions, which explains elevated rates of runaway pets in local newspapers a day or two prior to earthquakes. Research on Earth's magnetic field and how it is affected by moving tectonic plates and earthquakes is ongoing.
Carcass
After a beached whale dies, it can become a source of disease and pollution. As they are very large, such corpses are difficult to move. There are reports of some cases where humans tried to blow up the carcass with explosives, with predictable side effects to spectators.
A whale carcass should not be consumed. In 2002, fourteen Alaskans ate muktuk (whale blubber) from a beached whale, and eight of them developed symptoms of botulism, two of them requiring mechanical ventilation.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5202a2.htm |title=Outbreak of Botulism Type E Associated with Eating a Beached Whale --- Western Alaska, July 2002 |journal=Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report |month=January 17 |year=2003 |volume=52 |issue=2 |pages=24-26}}</ref> This is of course a problem in common with any spoiled meat, or meat taken from an already-dead animal.
See also
References
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External links
- Protecting Whales from Dangerous Sonar (Natural Resources Defense Council)
- Does Sonar Harm Whales? (Tasmanian whale stranding October 2005: Epoch Times)
- Beached Whale Visible on Google Earth