Commuter traffic stops for whales on Australia’s humpback highway


PORT STEPHENS, Australia (AP) — Sydney’s harbor becomes a humpback highway in winter as the whales migrate from feeding grounds in Antarctica to breeding areas off Australia’s coast. Whale watchers are spoiled for sightings during peak traffic weeks in June and July, when 40,000 creatures the size of buses will navigate the waters of New South Wales. A pod of the giant, graceful mammals even created traffic delays for humans this month when a passenger ferry had to halt its passage across the harbor because they were swimming by. The humpback population boom is a sharp reversal from the 1960s, when numbers dwindled to a few hundred.

Reporting by Charlotte Graham-McLay and Mark Baker, Associated Press 

Banner image of a humpback whale breaching in Iceland, by Giles Laurent via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0).






Source link

More From Forest Beat

Environment Minister Dion George delivers a refreshing message — but can...

The minister of forestry, fisheries and the environment, Dr Dion George, has declared an uncompromising stance against the uncontrolled exploitation of South Africa’s...
Conservation
6
minutes

Land deal protects Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge from mine

Conservation
1
minute

Author Kim Stanley Robinson on climate fiction & navigating the climate...

...
Conservation
2
minutes

Predator breeding in South Africa — time for a reality check

Large-scale breeding of predators with attendant welfare abuses continues unabated in South Africa, while exports only notionally comply with regulations.   A recent statement by...
Conservation
7
minutes
spot_imgspot_img