Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Quebec Research Team Attempts Rescue Of Hours-old Beluga Calf Found On Shoreline

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2016 11:45 AM
    RIVIERE DU LOUP, Que. — A washed-up baby beluga prompted a major rescue effort in Quebec last week, highlighting researchers' struggles to reverse the endangered population's decline.
     
    The province's marine mammal emergency response team was called on Thursday after a vacationing family spotted the young beluga on the shoreline in Riviere-du-Loup, about 200 km northeast of Quebec City.
     
    Veterinarians determined it was a newborn female who seemed healthy, according to Josiane Cabana of the Quebec Marine Mammal Emergency Response Network.
     
    "She seemed to be in good shape and quite vigorous, and only a few hours old," she said.
     
    Scientists have been sounding the alarm over the abnormally high number of carcasses belonging to pregnant or lactating females and young calves that have been washing up along the St. Lawrence river in recent years, but Cabana said it's relatively unusual to find one alive and in good condition.
     
    The team made up of members from Quebec's Group for Research and Education on Marine Mammals (GREMM) decided the calf's best chance for survival was to put her in the water near a group of females in the hopes that one of them would adopt her.
     
    The group had previously attempted a similar rescue once before, in 2008, although they never found out if it succeeded.
     
    Cabana said members of the team administered first aid to the young female and kept her skin moist as she was transported to a boat.
     
    She was put back in the water near a group of female belugas after about an hour of searching.
     
    The young calf quickly blended in with the group, but left to swim with a different group soon after.
     
    The team of researchers lost sight of her after that and Cabana said they don't know what happened afterwards.
     
    She described the newborn's chances of survival as "low, to be honest -- but real."
     
    She said females in captivity have been known to adopt orphaned calves, and some have even begun to lactate spontaneously.
     
    The beluga population in the St. Lawrence estuary has been in a slow decline over the past decade, with many deaths seeming to come during calving season.
     
    In 2015, four to six of the 14 carcasses found were newborns and three were females who died while giving birth, according to data compiled by GREMM.
     
    Possible causes suggested by scientists include shrinking ice cover, boat traffic that could cause stress or interrupt communication between mothers and calves, and the decline of the herring population that provides an important food source.
     
    Cabana says two of the four carcasses found on the shores of the St. Lawrence so far this year belong to lactating females.
     
    She said that with less than 900 whales remaining in the St. Lawrence, each one is important -- including the little newborn whose fate remains unknown.
     
    "It's one of the reasons this type of (rescue) effort will be made -- to give belugas a chance, to put all the chances on their side," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Police Chief To Apologize For '81 Raids Targeting City's Gay Community

    Mark Saunders will directly tackle a series of raids of Toronto bathhouses that took place in 1981.

    Toronto Police Chief To Apologize For '81 Raids Targeting City's Gay Community

    Tories' Rona Ambrose Seeks To Keep Peace Between Leadership Campaign, Caucus

    Tories' Rona Ambrose Seeks To Keep Peace Between Leadership Campaign, Caucus
    OTTAWA — All politicians work to a clock ticking down towards the next election, but interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose's immediate task winds up a lot sooner.

    Tories' Rona Ambrose Seeks To Keep Peace Between Leadership Campaign, Caucus

    Drones Generating Some Buzz As Canada Post Looks To The Future Of Mail Delivery

    Drones Generating Some Buzz As Canada Post Looks To The Future Of Mail Delivery
    The post office is quietly exploring the possibility of small, unmanned aerial vehicles one day helping get the mail to where it needs to go, said Jon Hamilton, a Canada Post spokesman.

    Drones Generating Some Buzz As Canada Post Looks To The Future Of Mail Delivery

    Manitoba Premier Cites 'Personal Responsibility' In Pension Plan Decision

    Manitoba Premier Cites 'Personal Responsibility' In Pension Plan Decision
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba does not support a national agreement on boosting the Canada Pension Plan in part because it does not address the need for people to set aside their own retirement savings, Premier Brian Pallister said Tuesday.

    Manitoba Premier Cites 'Personal Responsibility' In Pension Plan Decision

    Councillors OK hefty pay hike for themselves for Fort McMurray recovery work

    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Councillors from a northeastern Alberta municipality severely damaged by a huge forest fire have voted themselves a hefty raise.

    Councillors OK hefty pay hike for themselves for Fort McMurray recovery work

    Stem Cell Scientist Suspected Of Involuntary Manslaughter

    Stem Cell Scientist Suspected Of Involuntary Manslaughter
    STOCKHOLM — A disgraced stem cell scientist is facing preliminary charges of involuntary manslaughter in connection with two patients who died after windpipe transplants, Swedish prosecutors said Wednesday.

    Stem Cell Scientist Suspected Of Involuntary Manslaughter