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Displaying items by tag: Whale Life

The body of a 44-foot long endangered sei whale was found on the bow of a cruise ship as it approached New York last weekend.

As CBS news reports, the carcass was discovered as the ship neared the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal.

The relevant authorities were “immediately notified,” according to the cruise ship owners, MSC Cruises.

The whale was impaled on the MSC Meraviglia, which docked at Brooklyn before sailing to ports in New England and Canada.

The carcass was taken to Sandy Hook, New Jersey for a necropsy.

The Atlantic Marine Conservation Society said that tests showed evidence of tissue trauma in the area of the whale's right shoulder blade and a fractured right flipper.

Its gastrointestinal tract was "full of food”, while samples of its organs will undergo toxicology reviews and analyses to identify any potential tissue diseases.

Robert A DiGiovanni, Atlantic Marine Conservation Society chief scientist, said it looked like the animal was alive when it was hit by the ship.

The society has responded to over 100 whale deaths in recent years, through entanglement in nets or collisions with vessels. The majority are humpback and north Atlantic whales, and a sei whale is unusual, the society said.

Sei whales are baleen whales. The filter feeders prefer deeper offshore waters.

Read the CBS News report here

Published in Marine Wildlife
Tagged under

The skeleton of a Wexford blue whale (82ft long) named Hope has supplanted ‘Dippy’, the much loved Diplodocus, as the main attraction at Hintz Hall in the National History Museum in London, reports The Green News.ie

“Look at the whale!” exclaim the children pointing upward, their small bodies further miniaturised as they pass beneath Hope’s colossal ribcage, comprised of 32 ribs and once housing a 500-pound beating heart.

One gets the impression their wonder and excitement is well matched by the sheer scale of Hope herself, her majesty, as well as the efforts taken by the museum staff to put her together – installing the largest living creature on Earth, bone by bone, in an act as deliberate as it was precise.

By replacing Dippy, a replica dinosaur, for something real, Hope’s keepers have inspired wonder for all wild creatures that exist today in an increasingly hostile world, with our whales all too often caught in the crosshairs.

Everything is changing

At the Irish Whale and Dolphin Group’s annual meeting held in Dublin last December, the phrase “everything is changing” summed up Ireland’s whale activity. While Sightings Officer Pádraig Whooley reported the huge potential for whale science in Ireland, the “flurry of sightings” in 2019 gives cause for concern. Times are changing, he said.

For much more click this link.

Published in Marine Wildlife

Dun Laoghaire Regatta 2023 Cruisers Three

A 19-boat Cruisers Three IRC fleet will compete at Volvo Dun Laoghaire Regatta 2023: 

  • GBR 144 Gerda Soling Andrew Riches
  • GBR 9140Y HRT Charisma 22 Mini Tonner Charles Adams
  • 5637Y F A 2 Limbo 6.6 Charlie McAllister
  • IRL 2 Chinook Soling Cormac Murphy
  • IRL 2855 Pamafe First 285 Gerry Costello
  • GBR 9589 Checkmate Impala 28 Ian McMillan
  • FRA 8214 Protis 1/4 Tonner Ian Southworth
  • IRL 89100 Imprint Formula 28 Johnny Flood
  • GBR 2840 She Too She 31 Jonathan Fawcett
  • IRL 7115 Gecko Kevin Darmody
  • IRL 1751 Illegal Kieran Dorgan
  • IRL 8001 Jibberish Lorcan O'Brien McLoughlin
  • IRL 90210 SNOOPY Martin Mahon
  • IRL 246 Saki Nicholson 31 Michael Ryan
  • IRL 35 ELEINT Trapper 300 Michal Matulka
  • IRL 3 ROMANCE II Soling Paul Tully
  • IRL 9554 Kahera Russell Camier
  • GBR 5373 HONEY BEE Hunter HB31 William Partington
  • IRL 307 Wynward Wyn McCormack