Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Whale Washes Up On N.S. Beach Near Area Where Other Species Found Dead

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Dec, 2016 07:48 PM
    DIGBY, N.S. — A dead whale has washed up in the same area of western Nova Scotia that has seen scores of dead herring, starfish, clams and lobster litter the shoreline — but fisheries officials say it's too early to say whether the deaths are related.
     
    Jennifer Thibodeau and her husband were driving past the beach on Whale Cove on Tuesday when they spotted what appeared to be a young whale, perhaps nine metres long, near the high water mark.
     
    She said the humpback whale did not appear to have any external injuries that could easily explain its death.  
     
    "It's really sad. I was crying about it this morning," said Thibodeau, whose home is about 150 metres from the beach.
     
    "From our house we can look out and watch them jump out of the water in the summertime. You can hear them blow and ... you can see them breach and it's sad to think that's one of those whales that we watched."
     
    Fisheries officials say it's too early to say whether the whale's death is related to a mysterious fish kill that appears to have spread to new species, including starfish, clams, lobsters and mussels now washing ashore alongside thousands of herring.
     
    Officials have tested for infections, diseases, toxins, predators and broader water quality issues — with all coming back negative so far.
     
    Dead herring have been found in a 100-kilometre swath of western Nova Scotia from St. Marys Bay to Tusket, with most between the mouth of the Sissiboo River and Plympton.
     
    A Fisheries biologist gathered samples in sub-tidal areas of St. Marys Bay Thursday to measure oxygen levels in the water near the beaches where herring began washing up about a month ago.
     
    Kent Smedbol, manager of the population ecology division at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, said depending on what the sampling reveals, DFO may set up monitoring in the area.
     
    But it doesn't make much sense to look at whether there is a link between the fish kill and the dead whale until the sampling is complete, he said.
     
    Smedbol said if the habitat on the ocean floor looks to be in good health, officials would likely rule out any local environmental issue, and it would be unlikely the whale death is related to the fish kill.
     
    But if the sampling reveals a general die-off in the sub-tidal area, then it might make sense to look at whether there is a connection, he said.
     
    Smedbol said the juvenile whale has likely been dead for "some time" — perhaps weeks. He said photos suggest there has been decomposition of the whale's interior organs and tissues.
     
    The department hasn't decided whether a necropsy will be done. Smedbol said there are only a few people in North America who have the expertise to perform the procedure on a large whale, and given its decomposed state, a necropsy may not provide a lot of information.
     
    "If it was blunt force trauma, we would probably be able to determine that. But if it was an illness or toxins... it would be very difficult to draw definitive conclusions on those causes of death," said Smedbol. "So the department will have to weigh the options."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Premiers To Push PM On Health Transfers Over Dinner After Climate Talks Wrap Up

    Premiers To Push PM On Health Transfers Over Dinner After Climate Talks Wrap Up
    "We want to talk about health care," Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall said Wednesday, pointing out that the first ministers meeting beginning Thursday in Ottawa is the second such gathering devoted to curbing greenhouse gas emissions.

    Premiers To Push PM On Health Transfers Over Dinner After Climate Talks Wrap Up

    Medical Clinic Collects Too Much Personal Info Through Surveillance: B.C. Audit

    Medical Clinic Collects Too Much Personal Info Through Surveillance: B.C. Audit
    Acting privacy commissioner Drew McArthur says an audit of the clinic in the Lower Mainland was the first of a private business in B.C. and began after a complaint was filed.

    Medical Clinic Collects Too Much Personal Info Through Surveillance: B.C. Audit

    Six New Overdose Prevention Sites In B.c. To Be Similar To Supervised Injection

    Two sites open today in Vancouver, while another two locations open next week in Victoria and the final two will open in Surrey later this month.

    Six New Overdose Prevention Sites In B.c. To Be Similar To Supervised Injection

    RCMP Seize 127 Kilograms Of Cocaine In Quebec Drug-Smuggling Investigation

    Investigators said they uncovered a scheme to import large quantities of cocaine destined for the Montreal market by routing it through Los Angeles and Houston.

    RCMP Seize 127 Kilograms Of Cocaine In Quebec Drug-Smuggling Investigation

    Kerala Catholic Priest Sentenced To Rigorous Imprisonment For 'Remainder Of His Life'

    Kerala Catholic Priest Sentenced To Rigorous Imprisonment For 'Remainder Of His Life'
    In its judgement, the court said the priest has "misused his position as a Vicar for the Church" and sentenced him to double rigorous imprisonment for life "which shall mean imprisonment for the reminder of his natural life".

    Kerala Catholic Priest Sentenced To Rigorous Imprisonment For 'Remainder Of His Life'

    All-Gender Washrooms In Schools Raises Question: Who Cares Where You Pee?

    All-Gender Washrooms In Schools Raises Question: Who Cares Where You Pee?
    REGINA — The small picture of a black toilet on a white background above the word "washroom" has become a big sign of inclusion for a rural school district in Saskatchewan.

    All-Gender Washrooms In Schools Raises Question: Who Cares Where You Pee?