A dead humpback whale was found floating in a Lubec cove, and scientists are eager to find the cause of its demise.
© ALLIED WHALE, COLLEGE OF THE ATLANTICA dead humpback whale was found floating in a Lubec cove, and scientists are eager to find the cause of its demise.
A dead humpback whale was found floating in a Lubec cove, and scientists are eager to find the cause of its demise. The discovery comes at a time of increasing mortality rates for the species.

People who have seen the whale estimate it's about 26 feet long. Ralph Dennison, the Lubec Harbormaster, visited the shore at Boot Cove, near Quoddy Head, to get a view of the animal.

"It was just starting to get kind of bloated," Dennison said. "It had a seagull on it, starting to eat some of the carcass, and there was some eagles flying around, and bits of it starting to wash to shore. That wasn't pretty, but that's the way nature is, I guess."

Dennison, who also captains a whale watch boat, said that judging from the large size of this whale's pectoral fins, it was likely a humpback.

Rosemary Seton of Allied Whale, a research unit at the College of the Atlantic, confirmed it was a humpback whale. Her team was able to gather a bit more information when they waded out to the animal Wednesday.

"It's a juvenile female humpback whale," Seton said. "We didn't see any impression that might suggest entanglement, so there's nothing like that. There was no bruising or anything that might suggest a ship strike."

Seton said the team was unable to shift the whale, which was floating on its back, enough to see whether evidence of the cause of death might be found on submerged areas of the animal. The question is gaining urgency, as humpbacks are one of several whale species whose mortality rates have risen in recent years.

The endangered northern right whale is in the most perilous condition, with only 450 left on the planet. North Atlantic humpbacks are much more abundant โ€” more than 10,000 are estimated to swim off the coast of the United States and Canada.

Even so, Seton said they need close attention, too.

"This is a very robust population, so it can handle some of these deaths," Seton said. "But still, you don't ignore it when you've got twice the numbers dying that you usually get."

One year ago the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declared an "Unusual Mortality Event" for the humpback, the right whale and the minke whale. Federal scientists said the number of humpbacks struck by ships had risen to four times the usual average.

Deborah Fauquier, an NOAA veterinary medical officer, said the Lubec find brings the total number of dead humpbacks found so far this year to 10, continuing the elevated rate seen over the previous two years.

Research into underlying causes is ongoing, she said.

"Has where the whales gone changed?" Fauquier asked. "So have their distributions changed? Has their food changed? Has where ships go or fishing goes changed? And (we are) trying to evaluate that larger, bigger picture."

Fauquier said she's anxious to get more information about the latest humpback whale mortality.

Seton said she is hopeful her team will be able to gather more samples from the Boot Cove whale, ideally beaching it and performing a complete necropsy.