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Rescuers assist beached long fin pilot whales at Hamelin Bay

Rescuers try to save Australia’s beached whales

Rescuers on Tuesday used trucks and cranes fitted with giant slings in a bid to transport 11 surviving whales from a mass beaching on Australia”s west coast to a safe harbour for release. The survivors were among a pod of about 80 long-finned pilot whales and bottlenose dolphins that stranded in Hamelin Bay, south of the city of Perth, on Monday.

About 70 volunteers worked through the night to try to keep the remaining 17 animals alive, said conservation department spokeswoman Leanne O’Rourke, adding that despite efforts, some of the creatures had died.

At dawn a risky operation began to transport the 11 survivors by road to nearby Flinders Bay, a safer and more sheltered area for release.

“We did lose a few overnight and it’s a very traumatic experience for the animals so there’s definitely a lot of risk involved. But at this stage it’s all operating fairly smoothly so we’re very hopeful that we can get them out to sea and healthy and happy,” she said.

A mother whale and her calf were the first to make the 20 kilometre (12 mile) road trip to the spot where all the mammals are to be held in the shallows for simultaneous release before nightfall.

“They hold them on the beach until they’re all there, because of the social nature of the animals they need to release them all at the same time,” said O’Rourke.

“But they’re all in good condition, they’re calm and it’s all looking quite positive at the moment,” she added.

About 350 whales have beached in the area in recent years, of which 35 were long-finned pilot whales.

Road rescue operations between Hamelin and Flinders bays have been attempted twice before, in 1986 and 1988, but never with the long-finned pilot species, O’Rourke said.

The latest beaching takes the total number of whales stranded around southern Australia and Tasmania in the past four months to more than 400.

Earlier this month rescuers saved 54 pilot whales after nearly 200 of the giant creatures beached themselves on King Island off Australia’s southern coast.

In November, more than 150 pilot whales died after beaching themselves on Tasmania’s west coast and in January, 48 sperm whales died on a sandbar at the north of the island.

(From google.com, Western Australia, AFP)

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