French racing to save stranded Beluga whale

A drone image taken by the environmental group Sea Shepherd on Friday shows a wayward Beluga whale in the Seine River west of Paris.
(AP/Sea Shepherd)
A drone image taken by the environmental group Sea Shepherd on Friday shows a wayward Beluga whale in the Seine River west of Paris. (AP/Sea Shepherd)

SAINT-PIERRE-LA-GARENNE, France -- French environmentalists were hoping Friday to feed a catch of herring to a worryingly thin Beluga whale that has strayed far from its Arctic habitat into France's Seine River. They fear the white mammal is slowly starving in the waterway that flows through Paris and beyond.

"We are in a race against the clock, clearly," said Lamya Essemlali, president of marine conservation group Sea Shepherd France. "It is really extremely thin. Its bones are protruding. I don't know if it's already too late."

Conservationists were hoping to spare the whale the fate of another, an Orca, also known as a killer whale, that strayed and then died in the Seine in May.

The Beluga was first seen in the river earlier this week. Drone footage subsequently shot by French fire services showed the whale gently meandering in a stretch of the river's light green waters between Paris and the Normandy city of Rouen, dozens of miles inland from the sea.

"It's quite an impressive animal, which is white [and] which seems calm. It doesn't seem stressed, surfacing regularly," fire service officer Patrick Herot, from Normandy's Eure region, told French broadcaster TF1.

But Sea Shepherd France said the whale appeared in poor shape when spotted Friday. The group had a boat on the river, along with drones, trying to monitor it -- no straightforward task with a mammal that can spend many minutes underwater.

Sea Shepherd France hoped to help the whale keep up its strength by feeding it a catch of herring, Essemlali said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.

"We are very worried," she said. "The urgency is to feed it."

In ocean waters, Belugas eat an array of fish as well as octopus, squid, crabs, shrimp and other animals. But the freshwater river can't sustain its dietary needs.

"It can't feed itself in the Seine," Essemlali said.

Belugas are comparatively small members of the whale family, growing to about 13 feet in length.

Rather than try to coax the weakened whale back down the river toward the sea, Sea Shepherd France is pushing for it to be captured, so it can then be repatriated by plane to the Arctic waters it likely came from, Essemlali said. She said DNA testing could determine whether it came from waters around Norway, Canada or Russia.

"It's logistically difficult but is is doable," she said. "It will be a matter of will."

"That will only be possible if we can feed it," she added.

Authorities for the Eure region said the whale was believed to be wandering a 25-mile stretch of river between two sets of locks northwest of Paris. They also said the mammal seemed worryingly thin and that it swam away from boats hoping to guide it in the direction of the river's wide mouth, between the seaports of Le Havre and Honfleur.

Belugas' pale skin and bulbous foreheads make them easily recognizable. Known also for their sociability, they habitually live, hunt and migrate together in pods.

Belugas are considered an endangered species and are often found in shallow coastal Arctic waters, according to the U.S. government's National Ocean Service. It said that because Belugas make an array of clicking, whistling, squealing, chirping and moo sounds underwater, they're also known as the "canaries of the sea."

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