YAHOO.COM - Officials in Florida are investigating a report that swimmers might
have been trying to ride a sickly sperm whale before it died off the
coast of an Atlantic beach.
The 35-foot (10.6-meter)-long creature was spotted Sunday (Dec. 16)
morning just off Pompano Beach and never quite stranded. As it floated
close to the shore, a woman from a nearby condo snapped a picture that
allegedly shows two people paddling out to the whale and one getting on
top of it. That witness told local NBC station
WTVJ-TV she saw the swimmers approach the whale twice, adding that she
believed the creature was still alive at the time, since she saw its
tail flapping.
Her testimony could land those beachgoers in hot water, as close
encounters of this kind are illegal under the Marine Mammal Protection
Act, Blair Mase, NOAA's southeast marine mammal stranding coordinator,
explained to LiveScience.
Mase said wildlife officials didn't know about the whale-riding report
at the time of a preliminary examination of the dead animal. But she
said they did notice "some unusual markings" on the underweight,
not-quite full-grown female whale.
Sperm whales are common in deeper, offshore waters in the region and,
on average, just one to two strandings occur per year, Mase said. When
the whales get so close to the shore, that's usually a sign that they're
sick or injured — and it certainly doesn't help to be mounted by a
human.
"Harassing a whale in a state like this could lead to its demise," Mase
said, noting that approaching such a powerful, unpredictable animal
could also spell serious danger for humans.
While police are taking charge of investigating the whale-riding
report, researchers could provide a clearer picture of what happened to
the whale by examining its body. By Monday, the carcass had washed
ashore near a pier at Deerfield Beach. Wanting to keep the unsightly
corpse away from the touristy area, local officials had wildlife
specialists tow it about a mile out to sea Monday afternoon.
Mase told LiveScience her team is hoping to drag the whale back onto the beach eventually so that they can perform a full necropsy and determine the cause of death. (It's not possible to do this animal autopsy out at sea. "Too many sharks," Mase said.)
Florida, no stranger to strange news,
has been over this before. Just in October, a St. Petersburg woman
turned herself in after damning photos surfaced showing her riding a manatee
at Fort DeSoto Park. At the time, reports suggested she could have
faced up to 60 days in jail and a possible fine of $500 for her crime.
Getting within 100 yards (91 meters) of marine mammals is illegal, and
the limits are even stricter for more seriously endangered species. For
example, you're not allowed to get within 500 yards (457 meters) of
right whales, Mase said. With only 300 to 400 in existence, North Atlantic right whales are among the most endangered in the world.