(BACN) – San Francisco Bay hosts a gray whale flow over the past week or so, including floating death near Alcatraz Island on Saturday. Since the whales began to accommodate the Gulf, there have been many scenes and experts from the Marine Mammary Center in Marine Hidlands, they advised sects to be careful to water because, although the famous large animals are sometimes difficult to discover.
“While this number of gray whales in the Gulf of San Francisco is interesting, it raises concerns about the safety of man and whale,” says Cathy George, director of biology to preserve Cetasin at the center. “It is difficult to see the gray whales because of its low patterns and coloring that are naturally mixed in the Gulf. It is important that all the twins are vigilant and whale shield.”
As for the dead whale, it was first monitored on Saturday morning, employees from the center and the California Academy of Sciences covered with tissue and pictures samples and mark them with the buoy.
By Sunday, the whale was drifted under the Golden Gate Bridge, outside the Gulf and on the Black Sands Beach in the Golden Gate National Entertainment on Marin Headlands. This is the place where a team of scientists was able to conduct an anatomy on the whale whale, which is 36 feet long, according to the officials of the Marine Mammals Center.
Although it is still unclear what killed the animal – the first dead whale in the region this year – it turned out to have been shook and is likely to be a “sub -” female.
There was no initial evidence of the shock of the sharp power of hitting a boat, one of the most important threats to the safety of the gray whale. Tests on dead whale tissue samples may take several weeks to perform.
People can report marine or wounded mammals, or who were cut off in the San Francisco Bay area, by calling the California Academy of Science at (415) 379-5381 for dead animals or marine mammal center in (415) 289-7325 live animals.
People can also download the whale alert application on https://conservice.io/new-page.
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