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A second dead grey whale has washed ashore in British Columbia in less than a week. Fisheries and Oceans Canada has confirmed that the latest dead whale was reported on May 11 in Haida Gwaii and a ...
Photo by HO / THE CANADIAN PRESS Two dead grey whales have washed up off the B.C. coast in the past week, leading to recovery efforts and investigations to find out what happened to them.
A second deceased grey whale has washed ashore on a B.C. beach, less than a week after one was found at Long Beach on Vancouver Island. A spokesperson with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans said ...
This recent sighting of a grey whale off Nantucket, Mass., was surprising to scientists, since they've been extinct in the Atlantic for centuries. (Submitted by the New England Aquarium) ...
A large grey whale was first discovered on May 11 near a beach on the east side of Haida Gwaii, B.C. Anyone with information asked to call DFO line.
Over that period, the U.S. federal ocean agency, NOAA, reported 690 grey whale strandings, including 347 in the United States, 316 in Mexico and 27 in British Columbia.
Officials with Pacific Rim National Park said the whale was first spotted on May 6 floating offshore on the west coast of Vancouver Island. On Wednesday, it washed up on the beach.
A young grey whale that washed up on a Vancouver Island beach last weekend likely died of starvation, and not an attack by another whale as was suspected. Paul Cottrell, marine mammal co-ordinator ...
A second dead grey whale has washed ashore in British Columbia in less than a week.Fisheries and Oceans Canada has confirmed that the latest dead whale was reported on May 11 in Haida Gwaii near the ...
According to the Tofino Whale Centre, each spring grey whales travel between 10,000 and 12,000 miles between their winter calving lagoons in the warm waters of Mexico and their summer feeding ...