Humpback whale photographed 40 years ago in Caribbean dies after beaching on Sable Island - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Humpback whale photographed 40 years ago in Caribbean dies after beaching on Sable Island

A humpback whale died earlier this month after beaching itself on Sable Island. The whale had been previously sighted over 40 years ago.

Whale estimated to be 12 metres long and weighed at least 25 tonnes

whale on the beach
This humpback whale beached itself on Sable Island and died in early November 2023. (Sarah Medill/Parks Canada)

A humpback whale died in early Novemberafter beaching itself on Sable Island, about 200 kilometresoff the coast of Nova Scotia, and Parks Canada workers determinedthey were unable to save the animal.

The whale was identifiedwhile it was alive, based on a photograph taken by Parks Canadathat showed a distinguishing mark on its tail. The whale had been previously sighted over 40 years ago.

"We were all in the vehicle out on a patrol going eastward along the South Beach and we came across the humpback whale," said Sarah Medill, operations co-ordinator for Sable Island national park reserve. "A humpback whale is about 25 tonnes and we knew that we don't have equipment or any ability to help in that kind of a situation."

Medill said Parks Canada only hastwo Bobcat loaders on the island,which were too small to help the whale.

"There's a number of reasons that we can find them beached to shore," said Tonya Wimmer, executive director for Marine Animal Response Society (MARS)."Sometimes it is purely an accident in the sense that maybe they took a left when they should have taken a right."

whale on the beach
Parks Canada workers photographed the whale and sent the images to the Center for Coastal Studies and Allied Whale at the College of the Atlantic in Maine and Massachusetts. Researchers there identified it as a whale that hadn't been seen in more than 30 years. (Kristina Penn/Parks Canada)

MARS, a Canadian charitable organization that focuses on marine animal conservation, received a phone call from Medill and her team to report the incident.

Wimmerand Medill said the team decided they couldn'trescue the 12-metre mammaldue to the harsh conditionsand the animal's size.

"Logistics play a big role in this even for a whale of this size," Wimmer said. "To have an animal that big be sort of stranded, high and dry on a beach, it's really difficult to be able to put them back in the water.

"It's an unfortunate thing but sometimes you have to make the really difficult decision to let nature take its course."

When the team was documenting the incident,the whalelifted its tail exposing a distinguishing mark, something Wimmersays is 'like a fingerprint' to help identify the mammal.

After the photograph was taken, it was sent to Allied Whale at the College of the Atlantic in Maine and the Centerfor Coastal Studies inMassachusetts. It was determined the whale was at least 43 years old, which is not unusual, with some reaching the age of 80, Wimmer said.

"They were able to match this animal to an individual that was originally sighted in 1982 down on the Silver Bank, south Dominican Republic," Wimmersaid.

"The last sighting of this animal was during the early 1990s," she said.

That was duringa projectcalled the Years of the North Atlantic Humpback (YoNAH), which broughttogether researchers to compare photographs and data onthe North Atlantic humpback.

The whale's body is still on the Sable Island beach, and samples are being collected for genetic testing.Wimmer said a necropsy would usually be performed to try todetermine the cause of death, but it won't be done in this casebecause of the isolated locationand length of time the whale has been dead.