The apparent victim of a ship collision, a dead 70-foot (20-meter) blue whale (pictured) washed ashore in a forbidding northern California cove this week.
Though unable to move the blue whale, scientists and students are leaping at the research opportunity, scrambling down rock faces to take tissue samples and eventually one of the 11-foot-long (3.5-meter-long) flippers.
Though relatively infrequent off California until recent years, ship collisions are “the number one human threat to blue whales,” according to marine biologist Joe Cordaro of the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service.
This week’s collision, he said, marks the second time this year that a ship off California has fatally wounded a blue whale.
WOW. and for once, the animal actually matches the color in it’s name.
