Australian officials euthanize lost baby whale who had tried to suckle from boats it mistook for its mother

 

                            An ABC TV framegrab shows a baby humpback whale trying to suckle ...
                            AFP/HO/File
                            Wed Aug 20, 4:14 AM ET
                            18 of 30

An ABC TV framegrab shows a baby humpback whale trying to suckle from an yacht near Sydney. The baby whale abandoned by its mother was still trying to suckle from yachts in an Australian harbour Wednesday as last ditch efforts were being made to save it from death.

(AFP/HO/File)



                         In this handout photo released by NSW Parks and Wildlife, a ...
                         AP
                         Wed Aug 20, 12:12 AM ET
                         24 of 30

In this handout photo released by NSW Parks and Wildlife, a lost humpback whale calf swims around the Pittwater, north of Sydney Harbour Wednesday, Aug 20, 2008. The 1- to 2-month-old calf was first sighted Sunday in waters off north Sydney, and on Monday tried to suckle from a yacht, which it would not leave.

(AP Photo/NSW Parks and Wildlife)


Australian officials euthanize lost baby whale

SYDNEY, Australia – The baby humpback whale was starving, injured and hours from death. So despite anguished cries of "Murder!" and "Shame!" from protesters who thought it could still be saved, wildlife officials on Friday euthanized the animal, which had strayed into the waters off north Sydney nearly a week ago.

The decision to end the calf's life, first sighted in the inlet on Sunday, closed a story that exposed divided opinions over what should have been done for the whale, nicknamed "Colin."

Attempts to tow the 1- to 2-month-old calf out to sea failed, as it continued to try to suckle from boats it apparently mistook for its mother. A few people designed feeding mechanisms they hoped could deliver nourishment to the animal, but officials deemed artificial nursing impossible. An Aboriginal whale whisperer tried to soothe the creature, patting it while singing a humming, tongue-rolling tune — but Colin swam away to nuzzle another boat.

By Friday morning, the whale was starving, riddled with parasites, appeared to have been attacked by sharks, and had drifted into very shallow waters, said Sally Barnes, deputy director-general of the New South Wales Department of Environment and Climate Change. There was no other choice but to end the whale's misery, she said.

"It's a very sad day — it's a very emotional day," a weary-looking Barnes said as she stood in the rain soon after the 14-foot-long creature was dragged to a beach. "People have become very attached to this whale."

Wildlife officials in half a dozen boats corralled the creature into an area near the shore and injected it with a sedative. The whale could be seen thrashing and struggling in the chilly, gray waters as workers began towing it toward the beach. Several slowly stroked the animal's back, before hoisting it onto the beach and administering a lethal injection.

Gray tarps were hung around the animal's body to obstruct the view of journalists and protesters in nearby boats. Media were blocked from accessing the inlet by land, and maritime police patrolled the waters to stop boats from approaching.

The body was later sent to Sydney's Taronga Zoo for an examination.

"Shame! Shame!" yelled Brett Devine, a marine salvage and rescue worker who had hoped to feed the whale a milk and krill concoction via a tube that lay unused on his boat.

"It's shameful what we've done here today," he said angrily. "It's very un-Australian. It's disgusting."

Barnes and other marine experts defended the euthanasia, insisting the whale died in the most humane way possible.

"This animal needed to be destroyed," said Steve Coleman, an official with the animal welfare group RSPCA. "It was cruel to keep it alive."

Officials believe the calf was abandoned by its mother, possibly because she was ill. The parks service was investigating reports of an adult whale carcass being eaten by sharks off the coast of the southern state of Victoria on Friday, Barnes said. Officials hoped to collect a DNA sample from the whale to determine whether it was the mother.

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Associated Press writer Tanalee Smith contributed to this report.

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On the Net:

National Parks and Wildlife Service: http://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/nationalparks.htm


Article:  HERE




A lost humpback whale calf swims beside a yacht in Pittwater, ...
Reuters
Wed Aug 20, 1:32 AM ET
22 of 30

A lost humpback whale calf swims beside a yacht in Pittwater, about 40 km (25 miles) north of Sydney, August 20, 2008. Rescuers in Australia are trying to save a baby humpback whale which they say took a shine to a moored yacht, possibly mistaking the vessel for its lost mother. The whale calf was found at Pittwater, north of Sydney, after apparently being abandoned by its mother off the Australian east coast.

REUTERS/Daniel Munoz (AUSTRALIA)




In this framegrab image taken off from AuBC via APTN, a lost ...
AP
Tue Aug 19, 5:46 AM ET
27 of 30

In this framegrab image taken off from AuBC via APTN, a lost humpback whale calf swims around a yacht in the Pittwater, north of Sydney Harbour Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2008. The calf seems to think the yacht is its mother and will likely die within days if it doesn't find another mother to adopt it, a wildlife official said Tuesday.

(AP Photo/AuBC via APTN)




The tail of a humpback whale. Fears were growing Tuesday for ...
AFP/File
Mon Aug 18, 11:11 PM ET
30 of 30

The tail of a humpback whale. Fears were growing Tuesday for the survival chances of a lost baby humpback whale who tried to suckle from an Australian yacht in the belief it was its mother

(AFP/File/Greg Wood)

 

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