2 dolphins found dead; 3 injured returned to sea

Posted by siteadmin
January 28, 2025
Posted in News
A dolphin is being brought to shore after it was stranded in Sitio Pambutan, Barangay Canlargo in Bais City, Negros Oriental on Sunday, January 26, 2025. The police reported two dead dolphins and three others injured after more than 30 of the marine mammals were spotted close to shore on Saturday afternoon, January 25. (Bais City Police Station photo)
A dolphin is being brought to shore after it was stranded in Sitio Pambutan, Barangay Canlargo in Bais City, Negros Oriental on Sunday, January 26, 2025. The police reported two dead dolphins and three others injured after more than 30 of the marine mammals were spotted close to shore on Saturday afternoon, January 25. (Bais City Police Station photo)

Two dolphins were found dead, trapped in a mangrove area in Sitio Pambutan, Barangay Canlargo, Bais City, Negros Oriental, following a reported mass stranding on Sunday, January 26.

A third dead dolphin remained unrecovered while three others were rescued and treated for injuries, according to Colonel Roland Desiree Lavisto, Bais City police chief.

Lavisto told the Philippine News Agency that retrieval efforts for the third dolphin were halted due to rising tides but will resume once weather conditions become favorable.

“We will resume during low tide and when the weather allows us,” he said.

Coast Guard staff, police officers and civilians assisted in the rescue and retrieval operations.

Witnesses initially reported seeing three dead dolphins in the mangroves.

Residents spotted over 30 dolphins in the area’s low tide waters on Saturday afternoon, January 25, prompting efforts to guide them back to deeper waters.

The first deceased dolphin, found at 10:40 a.m., was a female weighing approximately 75 kilograms and measuring 216 centimeters.

The second, discovered at 2:15 p.m., was also a female of the same length and 111 centimeters in width. Both had visible lacerations likely caused by stranding.

City veterinarians Dr. Melanie Pescadilla and Cyron Maraña from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources conducted necropsies and sample collection.

The dolphins were buried at the city landfill.

The three rescued dolphins were treated and returned to the sea, while the Coast Guard continues to monitor the coastline to prevent further strandings. (PNA)

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