Advertisers
Free Chat Rooms   UK Chat Rooms   Chat Community   Chat   
Free Chat Rooms   Punk Rock T-Shirts   Free Chat   Live Chat   Concert Bands T Shirts   Chat Rooms   Fitness News   Band T Shirts   
Free Web Directory | Directory Submission Service | Buy Text Links | Theaters and Showtimes | News Archive |
Suggest a Site | Check Status
Kiva - loans that change lives

River-Visiting Whales Apparently Back at Sea

Current Headlines

River-Visiting Whales Apparently Back at Sea

May 31, 07:39 AM

Current Headlines: By MARCUS WOHLSEN

By MARCUS WOHLSEN

The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO - More than two weeks after they were first spotted far up the Sacramento River, two lost humpback whales appeared to have finally found their way home Wednesday.

Officials said they assumed the pair returned to the open sea, undoing a wrong turn that drew thousands of admirers and a flurry of rescue efforts.

The unpredictable duo, believed to be a mother and calf, were last seen at sunset Tuesday less than 10 miles from the Golden Gate Bridge, after they traveled 25 miles southwest from another busy bridge. The convoy of boats that accompanied them across the bay to keep traffic at a distance abandoned their escort service when it got dark.

Officials believe the whales slipped out of San Francisco Bay to the open sea late Tuesday night or early Wednesday , when no one was watching.

"If they have gone out and made their way past the Golden Gate, they have done so quietly," said Bernadette Fees, deputy director of the California Department of Fish and Game.

To make sure the whales did not take another wrong turn, two government boats were launched Wednesday morning to look for them in the Pacific Ocean, Fees said. Rescuers planned to rely on reports from commercial vessels and Coast Guard patrols to determine whether the humpbacks still were in the bay.

As the afternoon wore on, producing only a sighting of two other whales, officials grew increasingly confident that the humpbacks, which were injured by a boat during their two-week sojourn inland, were on the move and decided to stop searching for them.

"If we don't see them, we are going to call it," said Jim Oswald, a spokesman for the nonprofit Marine Mammal Center, a private scientific and rescue organization.

Marine scientists said Wednesday that although they do not know why the pair swam 90 miles inland, the massive operation to rescue the humpbacks yielded valuable information about the endangered species. It was the first time the same humpbacks were studied in the wild for so long, according to Fees.

The information scientists gathered includes sound recordings, logs of their behavior and tissue samples from both the mother and calf, which will be analyzed to determine whether they come from a pod of whales that travel between Mexico and California.

Oswald said the experience could prove helpful in approaching other stranded whales.

After the whales were spotted near Sacramento on May 13, officials spent days trying to guide them back to the ocean, playing recordings of other whales, surrounding them with boats, blasting them with fire hoses and banging on metal pipes dangling under water.

Those involved in the rescue effort said they did not know whether the various methods had hastened the whales' exit or hindered it. They speculated Wednesday that antibiotics given to the whales on Saturday to try to slow the damage from their wounds may have marked a turning point ; the pair began their hasty retreat from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta after that.

Biologists said the saltier water where the mother humpback whale and her calf had been swimming since leaving the delta helped reverse some of the health problems caused by long exposure to fresh water.

Officials were unsure how much was spent on the rescue efforts, but they said the expenditures of time and money were justified, if not required under wildlife protection laws.

Biologists had planned to attach a satellite tracking tag to the mother humpback, but gusty winds and malfunctioning equipment stymied them. Distinct markings on both whales' tails were photographed so they could be identified in the future, Fees said.

(c) 2007 Virginian - Pilot. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

River-Visiting Whales Apparently Back at Sea
Back to Current Headlines
Repair Credit   Gate Operator   Harley Davidson Accessories   Wedding DJ Massachusetts