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Hawaii whale dies with fishing nets, plastic bags in stomach

STATE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES / ASSOCIATED PRESS 
                                Fishing traps, nets, plastic bags and other marine debris were found inside the stomach of a whale that died and washed ashore at Lydgate Beach in Kauai over the weekend. It likely died from consuming the large volume of debris.
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STATE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Fishing traps, nets, plastic bags and other marine debris were found inside the stomach of a whale that died and washed ashore at Lydgate Beach in Kauai over the weekend. It likely died from consuming the large volume of debris.

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Dead whale on Kauai had nets, plastic debris in stomach

A whale that washed ashore in Hawaii over the weekend likely died in part because it ate large volumes of fishing traps, fishing nets, plastic bags and other marine debris, scientists said Thursday, highlighting the threat to wildlife from the millions of tons of plastic that ends up in oceans every year.

The body of the 56-foot long, 120,000-pound animal was first noticed Jan. 27 on a reef off Kauai. High tide brought it ashore Saturday.

Kristi West, director of the University of Hawaii’s Health and Stranding Lab, said there were enough foreign objects in the opening of the whale’s intestinal tract to block food.

“The presence of undigested fish and squid lends further evidence of a blockage,” she said in a news release from the state Department of Land and Natural Resources.

The whale’s stomach contained six hagfish traps, seven types of fishing net, two types of plastic bags, a light protector, fishing line and a float from a net. Researchers also found squid beaks, fish skeleton and remains of other prey in the whale’s stomach.

It’s the first known case of a sperm whale in Hawaii waters ingesting discarded fishing gear, West said.

The whale’s stomach was so large, West’s team wasn’t able to examine it completely. They suspect there was more material they weren’t able to recover.

Researchers found nothing wrong with other organs they examined. They collected samples to screen for disease and conduct other follow-up tests.

Sperm whales travel across thousands of miles in the ocean, so it’s not clear where the debris came from.

Scientists say that more than 35 million tons of plastic pollution is produced around Earth each year, and about a quarter of that ends up around the water.

Marine debris harms numerous species.

Seabirds can ingest as much as 8% of their body weight in plastic. Endangered Hawaiian monk seals and green sea turtles can get caught in plastic nets and die. Sharks and other apex predators eat smaller fish that feed on microplastic, which can then endanger their own health.

In addition to eating plastics, large whales are harmed when they become entangled in fishing gear or other ropes in the ocean. The drag from debris can force whales to use more energy to swim and make it harder for them to eat, causing starvation.

On Tuesday, marine mammal responders freed a humpback whale that was caught in rope, a bundle of gear and two buoys off the Big Island.

Sperm whales are an endangered species found in deep oceans across the world. A 2021 report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration estimated there were about 4,500 sperm whales in the waters around the Hawaiian Islands, from the Big Island in the south to Kure Atoll in the north.

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