

“It was an apocalyptic sight. I’d never seen anything like
it,” said one of the scientists who made the discovery, Vreni Haussermann of
the Huinay Scientific Center.

When the researchers flew over the region in June, they
found the scale of the die-off was much larger: at least 337 dead whales,
“including bodies and skeletons,” said Haussermann.
- “There are still a lot of areas we haven’t managed to reach, so it’s likely there are more dead whales,” she told AFP.
- The die-off, the biggest single event of its kind known to science, will be investigated in an upcoming issue of National Geographic magazine, which funded the expedition.
- Scientists initially said the whales did not bear any wounds, suggesting they may have died of a virus or a harmful algal bloom known as “red tide.”

Marine biologists say the warming of the world’s oceans is
putting dangerous pressure on whale populations by killing off their food supply and changing their age-old migratory routes.
Source:– AFP
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