FORT PIERCE, Fla. (AP) - More than 20 pilot
whales came ashore on a South Florida beach on Saturday, triggering a
daylong effort by state and national officials, nearby residents and
others to save them.
By evening, five pilot
whales - two calves and three juveniles - had been transported to
Florida Atlantic University's Harbor Branch Institute for
rehabilitation. The rest had died of natural causes or had to be
humanely euthanized, said Allison Garrett, a spokeswoman for the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's fisheries service.
"It was not possible to rehabilitate them," she told the Associated Press.
The pod of 22 whales came
ashore Saturday morning at Avalon Beach State Park in St. Lucie County.
They ranged from calves and juveniles to adult whales.
Garrett said it was unclear why the whales became stranded.
"Pilot whales are very
social animals," she added. "One scenario could be one of the animals
was sick. They won't leave (a sick whale). They'll stay together."
For this reason, it's
useless to push pilot whales back into the ocean, Blair Mase, stranding
coordinator for NOAA's Southeast Region, told TCPalm.com.
"If you push them into the
water, they'll just keep coming back and stranding themselves again,"
said Mase, who was surfing in the area when he noticed people running
toward the beached whales.
TCPalm.com reports that
hundreds of residents came to the beach to assist with the rescue,
helping the animals turn upright so they could breathe better.
Volunteers covered the whales with moist towels and poured water over
them. Red Cross volunteers helped ensure that volunteers stayed hydrated
in the hot sun.
"I think that people want
to help animals," said Jacqui Thurlow-Lippisth, a Harbor Branch
volunteer who worked with others to tend to juveniles in a shaded
inflatable pool. "Especially whales and dolphins, because they are our
counterparts in the seas. They're mammals, they're intelligent, they're
social. They're a lot like us."
Still, there was a sad undercurrent to the efforts, with rescuers aware that most of the whales were dying.
Garrett said there was no
obvious sign of trauma or injury to the whales, but that necropsies
would be performed on them. She said officials and volunteers spent the
day assessing the health of the whales to see which could be
rehabilitated, and then making the others comfortable.
She said the last such beaching in the area came in May 2011, on the Florida Keys.