Pilot whales are stranded in shallow Florida waters
NEW YORK. MAY 6. KAZINFORM Rescuers worked early Friday to save a group of pilot whales who stranded themselves in shallow waters near the Florida Keys; Kazinform refers to CNN.
There were more than 16 pilot whales stranded in an area about 20 miles north of Key West, said Art Cooper, chairman of the Marine Mammal Conservancy.
By about 4 a.m. ET, a team of about 50 people were able to get six of the whales into a safer area and were protecting them with a sea pen they had created, Cooper said.
The group of whales were spread out in about a four-mile area in waters that were as shallow as 3 inches in some areas.
The situation for the animals was dire because mass strandings can be a sign of some kind of sickness in some of the whales, Cooper said. Also being stuck in shallow waters make them vulnerable to predators.
Adult pilot whales can measure up to 20 feet long and weigh up to 3 tons. Due to their social nature, they are often involved in mass strandings, according to the American Cetacean Society, a California-based nonprofit group that works to protect whales, dolphins and porpoises.
Last year, dozens of pilot whales died in northern New Zealand after 58 of them were stranded on a remote beach.
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