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PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: ARTICLES

Entangled Right Whale - Scientists Prepare for Risky Rescue

Right whale

Scientists on Cape Cod are preparing for a bold and potentially dangerous attempt to save the life of a 50-ton Atlantic right whale entangled in fishing line off the Massachusetts coast.

The line - a thick synthetic rope - is wrapped around the whale's jaw and enmeshed deeply in its body. It has caused an infection which is spreading.

"If the line is not removed, this whale will eventually die," said Dr. Terri Rowles, a veterinarian from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's fisheries in Woods Hole, Mass.

Right whales, huge creatures that can measure more than 50 feet in length, are nearly extinct. Hunted nearly out of existence in the 19th century because of their heavy layer of blubber, the whales are now often victims of collisions with massive tankers or entanglement in fishing gear.

Scientists estimate there are only 300 right whales left, making the species one of the most endangered animals on the planet.

They are particularly concerned about the whale off Cape Cod because it is a 20-year-old male, important to reproduction and keeping the species extant.

The scientists were unable to attempt the rescue over the weekend because of fog and residual bad weather from Tropical Storm Allison. They have been tracking the whale's position with a satellite tag they attached to one end of the line. As of Monday morning, the whale was 75 miles east of Cape Cod.

Perilous Rescue

NOAA scientists will attempt the rescue with the Center for Coastal Studies in Provincetown. The center's scientists have been involved in the rescue of more than 50 whales over the last 20 years, but they say this one will be unprecedented.

They will try to cut the tangled line while the powerful whale is at sea, perhaps even a few feet under water and not restrained or in a confined area.

"Imagine a doctor trying to perform surgery with a scalpel attached to a fishing line, running alongside the patient attempting to make an incision," said David Mattila, head of the center's disentanglement team.

 

The team will approach the whale in a 17-foot inflatable boat, just one-third as long as the whale. They will first try to tire the whale by attaching the boat directly to the mammal and making it drag the craft along the water. (Ironically, in the 19th century that technique, called the "Nantucket Sleigh Ride," was used as a first step in killing whales.)

The rescue team will be at risk. One flick of the huge whale's powerful tail would be perilous.

The team might try to sedate the whale first. A drug would be administered by a rifle-fired dart. Marine veterinarians have been calculating the proper dose. But such sedation has never been tried before.

Specially Designed Tools

To cut the line, the rescue team has prepared custom-made tools, including V-shaped knives with one edge smooth and one razor-sharp. The smooth edge would slip under the line along the whale's skin, allowing sharp edge to cut the line free. The team would then remove it.

"We have not ever tried to make cuts of rope as deeply embedded," said Dr. Charles Mayo, a senior scientist at the center. "Whales have generally not been in such serious condition," he added, "so we're working right at the edge."

If they are unsuccessful, the scientists say they will rig the free ends of the line with buoys that will cause enough drag to help the whale free the line from its body.

Because right whales are protected under the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Act, the federal government must give permission for the procedure, which could potentially threaten the whale. The scientists are expecting to receive the go-ahead this morning.

The whale is in desperate condition. Mattila, who took part in one rescue attempt last week, said looking at the whale in that condition "just breaks your heart."

 

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