Hundreds of fishermen and
officials rescued 24 of the whales after their pod swam ashore in Probolinggo,
East Java
Agence France-Presse
Thursday 16 June
201611.02 BST
Eight pilot whales have died
after a mass stranding on the coast of Indonesia’s main island of Java that
sparked a major rescue operation, an official said Thursday.
Thirty-two of the short-finned
pilot whales came ashore during high tide early Wednesday in Probolinggo, East
Java province.
“At first there were just one or
two whales swimming near the shore, and the nature of whales is that if they
are sick they will come near the shore,” Dedy Isfandi, the head of the local
maritime and fisheries office, told AFP.
“But whales have such high social
interaction – when one fell ill, they approached the sick one to swim back to
sea ... when the tide fell all of them were trapped,” Isfandi added.
Hundreds of local fishermen and
government officials tried to take them back out to sea overnight, but in the
morning eight whales had returned to shore and died, Isfandi said.
About 23 others were already out
at sea while one disoriented whale was accompanied by rescuers to make sure it
did not return to shore.
Rescuers used tarps to wrap
around the beached whales and pull them out to sea, while swimmers plunged into
the water to drive others out of the area.
Vets and scientists conducted
autopsies on the dead whales to find out why they were stranded. Fishery
officials said it could be due to turbulent waters in the Indian Ocean or that
they had eaten something poisonous.
Over the last decade or so, whale
sharks and orcas have also been found stranded in the area, Isfandi said.
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