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Lost humpback whale abandoned by friends in croc-infested river in Australia

Lost humpback whale abandoned by friends in croc-infested river in Australia

BY Maria 25 Nov,2020 Humpback Croc

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A humpback whale is swimming the wrong way up an alligator-filled river in Australia's Northern Territory, according to media reports. The lost whale is traveling further inland than any whale has ever been seen on the continent, government experts said on Monday (Sept. 14).

5.jpeg"It's something that's never been recorded before — not just in the Northern Territory, but in Australia," Carol Palmer, a marine ecosystems scientist for the Northern Territory Government, "It's really, really unusual."

The stranded whale is one of three humpbacks spotted last week swimming in the East Alligator River, which connects Kakadu National Park in northern Australia with the nearby sea. Saltwater crocodiles inhabit the river's murky, brown waters as far as 160 kilometers inland, CNN reported, where they wait to ambush a variety of prey, including the occasional human.

As of Monday, two of the whales appear to have made a U-turn back to sea, while one remains swimming roughly 30 km upstream, seemingly lost. The threat of a croc attack seems slim for now, Palmer said, given the whale's massive size (16 meters long) — however, if the whale becomes stranded in shallow waters, it could become an easy target.

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To avoid that, Palmer and other experts are considering some acoustic strategies to force the whale to head back downriver, including blasting the river with underwater noise pollution or playing pre-recorded killer whale calls upstream to try and coax the humpback into reversing course. In the meantime, the government has set up an "exclusion zone" along the first 19 miles of the river to keep boaters out of the whale's way.

How did the humpback trio end up so far inland in the first place? It's likely they took a wrong turn on their way toward Antarctica, Palmer said. Every summer humpbacks migrate from their Australian breeding grounds to their Antarctic feeding grounds. On their way south, these whales could have swum accidentally into an estuary that fed them deeper into the river system. The river's murky brown waters don't help either, as they are hard to navigate by sight.

A recent boom in the local humpback population also means there are simply more whales around to get lost.

"We have seen a spike in their population in recent years," Palmer said. "There are probably upwards of 40,000 whales in the west coast population and 35,000 along the east coast."

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