Rarely beached
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Danette Goulet
It may be the largest thing to have hit Huntington city beaches in the
last three decades.
But the efficient burial of a decaying 45- to 50-foot Fin or Sei
Whale, which washed up on dog beach last week, meant a scientific loss
for marine biologists and researchers who would have studied the deep-sea
dweller.
“We’re disappointed because of the information that was lost,” said
Joe Cordaro, a wildlife biologist with the National Marine Fisheries
Service in Long Beach. “We understand that the city has a responsibility
to keep a clean beach and hopefully in the future we can be more clear.”
It was miscommunication that kept scientists from studying what may
have been a rare species to Southern California’s waters, scientists
said.
John Heyning, the deputy director of research and collections for the
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County and his team arrived Friday
morning to find the whale already buried in the sand.
From pictures of the stranded mammal, Heyning was able only to
determine that it was not a Blue Whale as lifeguards had supposed, but
either a Fin or a Sei whale, both of which are related to the Blue Whale
and members of the Baleen Opterid family, he said.
“Fin or Sei whales are very close relatives to the Blue -- smaller
cousins,” Heyning said. “The shape of the head is very distinctive on the
Blue Whale. It is rounded where for the Fin, Sei and all the rest are
pointed. We get fin whales once or twice a decade in Southern California
waters, the majority of which are struck by ships. There has never been a
record of a Sei whale in Southern California’s waters.”
Of the many things Cordaro and Heyning wished to have learned from the
remains the most important was species, which to Cordaro’s dismay will
have to be officially listed as “unidentified Baleen Opterid.”
“Well we definitely could have identified the species, sex, length and
determined absolutely whether a ship strike was the cause of death or if
that happened after death,” Heyning said. “It’s just unfortunate that we
didn’t get to learn more from this one.”
Both organizations are interested in determining what species are in
the waters off Southern California’s coast and at what time.
It is Cordaro’s job to keep track of the number of marine mammals that
wash up on shore. The museum has a permit from the National Marine
Fishery Service to collect parts and examine those finds.
“We’re interested in the biology of whales and whatever we can glean
from a dead stranded whale and cause of any whales death, especially if
it seems to be caused by humans,” Heyning said. “We can get a better
understanding of human impacts.”
These facts will all remain unknown however.
Within hours of the whale washing ashore about 150 yards from
lifeguard tower 22, the city’s beach maintenance crew had used its
largest tractor to roll the whale south of Goldenwest Street and buried
it 10 feet underfoot.
“We have some people we contact and we try to do that, but our main
goal is to get rid of the animal, to bury or remove it from the scene,”
said city lifeguard chief Steve Seim. “This one was so big, I’ve been
here since 1968 and it looks like it was bigger than anything I’ve seen.
We do like to get these people who like to come out and look at the
whale, but by the time he got here it was dark and the area was real
close to homes -- not pleasant and you could smell it across the
highway.”
The decomposing whale, which was first reported by boat crews, was
sighted offshore just before 4 p.m., Seim said.
A state lifeguard boat went out and threw a rope around it and
attempted to pull it back out to sea, but to no avail, he said.
When it finally hit shore at about 6:30 p.m. it was not a surprise.
When there are strandings the beach maintenance crew uses a tractor to
dig down 10-feet, which is as far as the tractor will go, and bury the
remains.
“Since it was in an area down by the bluffs [beach maintenance crews]
took the fork part of the truck [and] rolled it south,” Seims said.
“Since it was so big they rolled the middle then rolled one end then
rolled the other end. And the tractor was lifting up as they rolled it.”
Although an animal of this size washing up in Huntington Beach is
rare, marine life washing up is not.
“We get some kind of stranding every other week,” Seim said. “We’ll go
through a pattern where we’ll get a couple, two or three, a week then we
won’t get any for a month.”
“There are whales and whale parts and large sea lions in and along
this beach,” he added.
In the last three years, about 150 whales and dolphins have washed up
on California’s shores each year and thousands of seals and sea lions
roll in, each year, according to the National Wildlife Fishery Services.
The last record of an unidentified Baleen Opterid washing up in
California was in 1997.
The last recorded Fin Whale to wash up was in 1996.
Heyning hopes to gather more photos from curious residents and
passersby who snapped them to learn more about the creature.
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