11 stranded pilot whales saved in Sri Lanka

Published February 12, 2023
People look at whales as Sri Lankan navy and wildlife authority members work on a rescue operation to send back the pilot whales to deep sea, which were washed up on the Kudawa beach in Kandakuliya.—Reuters
People look at whales as Sri Lankan navy and wildlife authority members work on a rescue operation to send back the pilot whales to deep sea, which were washed up on the Kudawa beach in Kandakuliya.—Reuters

KUDAWA: Eleven pilot whales were saved on Saturday after they became stranded near the shore on Sri Lanka’s west coast in the early hours, wildlife officials said.

A navy team aided the rescue effort alongside local fishermen who raised the alarm when they spotted the pod after midnight near the resort village of Kudawa.

“There were 14 of them and three were dead on coming ashore,” wildlife officer Eranda Gamage said.

“They had to be taken into the deeper seas to drop them there so that they would not come back to the shore. The navy took them in their boats and dropped them.” Pilot whales — which can grow up to six metres (20 feet) long and weigh a tonne — are highly social.

The causes of mass strandings remain unknown despite scientists studying the phenomenon for decades.

In November 2020, Sri Lankan rescuers managed to save 120 pilot whales in a gruelling overnight effort that also involved the country’s navy.

Three pilot whales and one dolphin died of injuries following the mass beaching on the country’s western coast at Panadura, south of the capital Colombo.

Published in Dawn, February 12th, 2023

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