BFF-52 Concerns grow for Arctic beluga whale in Thames estuary

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BRITAIN-ANIMAL-WHALE-OCEANS

Concerns grow for Arctic beluga whale in Thames estuary

LONDON, Sept 26, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Concerns were growing Wednesday for a
beluga whale spotted in the River Thames estuary outside London, thousands of
kilometres (miles) from the cherished white species’ natural home in Arctic
waters.

The extremely rare sighting triggered wonder and excitement when the whale
was first seen on Tuesday, but after it was spotted again on Wednesday in
exactly the same location, concerns grew that the beluga had got lost and was
potentially in danger.

Rob Lott, a marine mammal scientist at the Whale and Dolphin Conservation
wildlife charity, said the cetacean was being monitored in case it strands on
a sandbank.

“The longer it stays in the Thames estuary then it will become more of a
concern,” he told BBC radio.

“Hopefully instinct will soon kick in and the beluga will leave the
estuary and go out into the North Sea and then head north where it should
be,” the scientist explained.

The sight of a beluga whale so far south — 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometres)
from even Iceland — is exceptional.

“Beluga whales are a species of the icy Arctic — finding one in the tepid
Thames is an astonishingly rare event,” said Rod Downie, polar chief adviser
at WWF, the World Wide Fund for Nature.

The last reported sighting of a beluga in UK waters was in 2015, when two
were spotted off the northeast coast of England and one in Northern Ireland.

Rescue teams are on standby in case the whale gets into danger.

“It’s very unusual and it’s not a very good place,” Julia Cable,
spokeswoman for British Divers Marine Life Rescue, which saves marine animals
in distress, told AFP.

“We wouldn’t go anywhere near it in a boat. We could just do more harm
than good.”

– Feeding around barges –

The beluga was first sighted on Tuesday near the southern Kent side of the
river, downstream of Gravesend.

It was feeding around moored barges and did not move more than 200 metres
during the day.

Ornithologist Dave Andrews, who first spotted the whale, said it was back
in the same place on Wednesday.

“The Thames beluga is back feeding in its favoured spot around the barges
on the Kent side,” he said urging all boats to “keep clear and let it alone”.

The Thames remains a busy waterway. The whale’s location is between two
major container docks, Tilbury and the new London Gateway port.

Belugas typically live for 40 to 60 years. Highly sociable, they typically
form pods and are often seen in river estuaries in the summer.

The beluga’s appearance brings back memories of the famous 2006 Thames
whale.

A female northern bottlenose whale was discovered swimming in the river in
central London, going past the Houses of Parliament.

On its second day in the city, as it lost strength, rescuers intervened
and lifted it onto a barge by crane. It died, after suffering from
convulsions, near Gravesend as the barge rushed towards the open sea.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1646 hrs