The first North Atlantic right whales of the season have appeared off local beaches.
On Wednesday, a mother and her newborn calf were spotted off Crescent
Beach, bringing the total number of calves born so far this season to
seven.
Ron Ginn, a resident of A Street in Crescent Beach, sighted the pair
of whales close to shore at noon Wednesday. He phoned the Marine
Resources Counsel hotline and the information was relayed to the
Marineland Right Whale Project’s survey Air Cam. The Air Cam was
northbound on its survey and coincidentally was just approaching
Crescent Beach.
Joy Hampp, Marineland Right Whale Project coordinator and survey
pilot, said the mother and calf were just north of the State Road 206
bridge, no more than a quarter of a mile from the beach.
Both mother and calf appeared to be healthy, Hampp said.
The Air Cam was originally built for National Geographic research and
photography in Africa and is used by Hampp and other scientists to
observe and photograph whales farther off shore.
Late Tuesday, a dead right whale, estimated to be approximately a
year old, washed up in Palm Coast. While the official cause of death
will not be determined until a necropsy is performed, officials reported
that it had a large rope wrapped around its tail.
The endangered North Atlantic right whales number an estimated 350 to
400. The pregnant whales travel from the Bay of Fundy to warmer waters
in coastal areas of Georgia and Florida to give birth.
The early appearance of the right whales is encouraging to whale watchers after a dismal season that ended in February.
Hampp commented earlier that after an unusual season last year with
record warm temperatures, a low number of right whale calves were born
and only one right whale was sighted south of the St. Augustine Inlet.
“Although the official whale-watching survey is scheduled to begin in
early January, the whales don’t always follow that calendar,” she said.
The volunteer sighting network, a collaboration of the Marineland
Right Whale Project and the Marine Resources Council, has been in
operation for more than a decade.
Several hundred volunteers provide monitoring and stewardship in the
section from Ponte Vedra Beach south, where at least some of the whales
come in close to shore. The combination of the shore spotters and the
survey airplane has proven effective.
“It works because although there is a large area and few whales,
there are many eyes,” said Jim Hain, the program’s chief scientist.
For information, call 461-4058 or email
marinelandrightwhale@gmail.com.
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