
No further attempts will be made to rescue a humpback whale who has gotten repeatedly stuck off Germany's Baltic coast, officials said on Wednesday, as experts believe the animal will not survive its week-long ordeal.
Till Backhaus, environment minister for the north-eastern Mecklenburg-Vorpommern region where the whale is currently stranded, said a restricted zone has been established around the animal to allow it to die in peace as there was no more hope of freeing it.
"We did everything we could to give it a chance. This is a unique tragedy. But it chose this path for himself," the minster said.
A days-long saga to guide the animal back to deeper waters began on March 23, when the whale was first spotted stranded on a sandbank off Germany's Timmendorfer Strand resort.
The 12- to 15-metre-long animal managed to free itself a few days later after rescuers dug a channel in the surrounding sand using a floating dredger.
But instead of moving west towards the Atlantic, its natural habitat, it was spotted heading east and repeatedly got stuck in shallow waters again.
The whale is currently stranded in the Bay of Wismar, where it is expected to die, according to Burkard Baschek, scientific director of the German Oceanographic Museum.
Chances that the whale will free itself again are very slim, he said, noting that it has become significantly weaker.
The animal's breathing rate was very irregular on Wednesday morning, with intervals of more than four minutes at times and the whale is keeping its pectoral fins close to its body, according to the expert.
"The reaction to us, to our presence, was virtually zero," said Baschek.
Meanwhile, the water level in the bay is expected to continue to fall by around 10 to 15 centimetres, he added.
"We would have to encourage it vigorously [to free itself], which would be futile because it no longer has the strength," Baschek said, adding that any attempt would amount to animal cruelty due to the slim chances of success.
Citing "respect for nature," Baschek said rescuers had decided that "at some point we must let it go."
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Figure out how to Amplify Your Open Record Reward - 2
Flu season is ramping up, and some experts are "pretty worried" - 3
Netanyahu expects Iran's leadership to fall - 4
We tasted one of the 10,000 Hershey's Dubai chocolate bars being resold on eBay. Is it worth the hype? - 5
Aid sent by ambulance to Ukraine front line
Whale stranded off Germany for days found stuck again
BHP liable for 2015 Brazil mine disaster: UK court
We may be witnessing the messy death of a star in real time
Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket landed its booster on a barge at sea – an achievement that will broaden the commercial spaceflight market
6 Tire Brands Reasonable for Seniors
Countdown begins for long-awaited Artemis II moon mission
Army commander convicted of Guinea stadium massacre dies in prison
2025 Was Another Exceptionally Hot Year
NASA loses contact with its Maven spacecraft orbiting Mars for the past decade












