The dolphins or false killer whales were found on an isolated beach in northwest Tasmania. About 136 are alive, but ...
Dozens of dolphins have died after a pod of more than 150 stranded on a remote beach in Australia's southern island of ...
The animals are part of a pod of 157 whales that beached near Arthur River, a township in Tasmania. What caused them to beach remains unclear.
Department liaison officer Brendon Clark said the stranding was the first by false killer whales in Tasmania in since 1974.
After 157 false killer whales were stranded on a Tasmanian beach, experts said only 90 have survived. Following a few failed ...
In Tasmania, efforts to rescue more than 150 stranded false killer whales face dire challenges due to remote location and bad weather, leading to the euthanasia of dozens. The endangered dolphins, ...
A pod of 157 dolphins lies on the sand of a remote beach in Tasmania. Handout photo from the Department of Natural Resources ...
More than 150 false killer whales have been stranded on an isolated beach in the Australian state of Tasmania, with rescue crews trying to save the majority of the large dolphins that survived the ...
Over 150 false killer whales have become stranded on Tasmania's remote beach, prompting rescue operations. Most of the large dolphins survived, with 136 still alive. The cause of the stranding remains ...
The reasons for the beachings are unclear. Reasons could include disorientation caused by loud noises, illness, old age, ...