Current:Home > MySperm whale's slow death trapped in maze-like Japanese bay raises alarm over impact of global warming -EliteFunds
Sperm whale's slow death trapped in maze-like Japanese bay raises alarm over impact of global warming
View
Date:2025-04-19 17:20:38
Tokyo — The slow demise of a stray whale that spent its last days circling Osaka Bay not only saddened TV viewers across Japan, it also alarmed cetacean experts who called the whale the latest casualty of a warming planet.
"Whales used to lose their way every three years or so," Yasunobu Nabeshima, a visiting researcher at the Osaka Museum of Natural History, told CBS News. "Until now it was a rare phenomenon. But these incidents have increased."
This month's tragedy marked the second case in as many years.
Nabeshima said global warming has reduced the temperature differential between the Pacific Ocean and Osaka Bay, rendering the powerful Kuroshio Current "a warm-water conveyor belt" that propels whales from their usual deep ocean haunts into the shallow waters along the coast.
The most recent episode began in mid-January, when the sperm whale — one of the world's heaviest animals — was first sighted off the coast of Nishinomiya City in Hyogo Prefecture. TV cameras and local authorities intently tracked the doomed whale as it swam futilely eastward toward Osaka.
Deprived of its primary food, giant squid, the whale's spout grew noticeably listless.
Unlike Japan's easy-to-navigate harbors like Kobe, Osaka Bay, which serves Japan's third-largest city, is a maze of artificial islands and landfilled peninsulas, packed with theme parks and shopping malls as well as warehouses and industrial plants. It's effectively a death trap for marine mammals, with numerous nooks and crannies and bounded by wharves and breakwaters that can make it impossible for the creatures to find their way back out to the blue water.
Another sperm whale died near the mouth of the Yodo River in Osaka in January 2023. Nabeshima, of the Osaka museum, told CBS News that a pod of short-beaked common dolphins ended up stuck in Osaka Bay last fall and they could be seen from Yumeshima, an artificial island and site for Expo 2025, which opens in April. Sea turtles have also become stranded in the area.
The severely emaciated body of the latest sperm whale casualty, a male that weighed over 30 metric tons and measured 50 feet in length, was recovered and temporarily buried after officials decided it would be cheaper than hauling the carcass out to sea. After two years, the skeleton will be recovered and donated to a local museum.
Stray whales can be a jumbo-sized headache for local governments. The cost to taxpayers of the offshore burial for last year's stranded sperm whale was more than half a million dollars — 10 times the cost of a land burial, according to the Mainichi daily newspaper.
TV viewers watched in real time as the whale, lying on its side, its enormous jaws open in a "V," was tethered to the wharf and then carefully placed in an enormous sling. In a delicate procedure lasting over an hour, an oceanside crane gingerly lifted the carcass and placed it onto a flatbed truck, which carried it to its temporary resting place.
A researcher told the local network MBS TV that the creature would first undergo a forensic analysis to determine its cause of death, age, history of injuries and illness and a DNA test to determine its origin. The whale that became trapped last year was 46 years old. Sperm whales have been recorded to live as long as 62.
Experts also planned to search the creature's intestines for chunks of ambergris, an extremely rare and strange waxy substance produced in sperm whales from undigested pieces of squid and other cephalopods. Known as "floating gold" and found in only 1 to 5% of sperm whales, ambergris is used in French perfumes. In 2021 one chunk sold for $1.5 million.
Scientists have been calling for new measures to keep the mighty animals out of harm's way, including sensor-activated "acoustic deterrent devices" placed at the Kii Strait, the entryway to the Inland Sea from the Pacific Ocean, to prevent the whales venturing near the coastline.
- In:
- Climate Change
- Whales
- Global warming
veryGood! (7943)
Related
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Stunning change at Rutgers: Pat Hobbs out as athletics director
- Haley Joel Osment Reveals Why He Took a Break From Hollywood In Rare Life Update
- Taylor Swift's best friend since childhood gives birth to sweet baby boy
- 9/11 hearings at Guantanamo Bay in upheaval after surprise order by US defense chief
- Expect Bears to mirror ups and downs of rookie Caleb Williams – and expect that to be fun
- Florida primary will set US Senate race but largely focus on state and local races
- What to know about 2024 NASCAR Cup Series playoffs and championship race
- Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
- Expect Bears to mirror ups and downs of rookie Caleb Williams – and expect that to be fun
Ranking
- 'Most Whopper
- 2.9 billion records, including Social Security numbers, stolen in data hack: What to know
- Simone Biles cheers husband Jonathan Owens at Bears' game. Fans point out fashion faux pas
- Ukrainian forces left a path of destruction in the Kursk operation. AP visited a seized Russian town
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- 'SNL' alum Victoria Jackson shares cancer update, says she has inoperable tumor
- Who plays Emily, Sylvie, Gabriel and Camille in 'Emily in Paris'? See full Season 4 cast
- A Kansas high school football player dies from a medical emergency. It's the 3rd case this month.
Recommendation
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Watch: Patrick Mahomes makes behind-the-back pass after Travis Kelce messes up route
Spanx Founder Sara Blakely Launches New Product Sneex That Has the Whole Internet Confused
San Francisco goes after websites that make AI deepfake nudes of women and girls
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Demi Lovato’s One Major Rule She'll Have for Her Future Kids
Harris reveals good-vibes economic polices. Experts weigh in.
Retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Richard Secord fights on: once in Vietnam, now within family