42 dead whales found in Argentina
September 17th, 2009 - 11:49 am ICT by IANSBuenos Aires, Sep 17 (EFE) Forty-two pilot whales beached themselves and died in a small bay in the southern Argentine province of Chubut, a marine expert has said.
“We counted 42 dead pilot whales in an area that’s not much more than a small bay,” Centro Nacional Patagonico researcher Enrique Crespo said.
The finding “dispelled our fears that the discovery of bodies could extend much farther south, something that luckily did not occur”, Crespo told Argentine media.
The whales were found in Bustamante Bay, south of Chubut’s capital, Rawson, Crespo said, adding that blood and tissue samples taken from the animals would be analysed to try to determine what killed them.
“Two females were pregnant and in two other cases the hearing apparatus had parasites, but this does not mean that was the cause of disorientation that ended with the beaching,” the marine expert said.
- 10 cops charged in gang rape of teenaged boy - Jan 22, 2012
- 90 whales stranded on New Zealand beach - Jan 23, 2012
- Mass whale stranding on New Zealand beach - Nov 15, 2011
- Plane crashes while fighting Argentina forest fire - Jan 05, 2012
- Former French international Trezeguet to join River Plate - Dec 17, 2011
- More than 40 of 74 stranded whales die in New Zealand - Sep 22, 2010
- Dolphins, marine mammals hunted for human consumption - Jan 25, 2012
- Argentina draws 1-1 with Croatia in Davis Cup - Apr 07, 2012
- Whales too get fixated on new tunes - Apr 15, 2011
- Whales distressed by noise of ships' propellers - Feb 09, 2012
- 107 whales die on New Zealand beach - Feb 22, 2011
- Argentine TV host home after hospital stay - Aug 21, 2011
- A Festival of India set to charm Argentina - Dec 02, 2011
- Whale found dead 800 metres from shoreline - Sep 29, 2011
- 3 die in Mexican plane crash - Nov 01, 2011
Tags: animals, argentina buenos aires, centro nacional patagonico, crespo, dead pilot whales, dead whales, discovery, disorientation, fears, marine expert, parasites, pilot whales, rawson, researcher, tissue samples, two females