Last week, a nearly 40-foot whale washed ashore the Juhu beach in Mumbai. (File photo)
Mumbai:
A 40-foot-long blue whale was rescued along the Dapoli coast in Maharashtra's Konkan region by the marine experts and locals today.
A senior forest official said the mammal had stranded in three-feet shallow waters along the beach at Kolthare village in Dapoli tehsil of Ratnagiri district on February 1 and was rescued same day by the locals and marine experts.
"The whale was tied to two boats and taken around three km into the sea," N Vasudevan, Chief Conservator of Forests (mangrove cell) told Press Trust of India.
After the recent incidents involving deaths of stranded whales, this is the first incident where one has been rescued, an forest official said.
The whale weighs around 20 tonnes.
Last week, a nearly 37-feet-long bryde's whale, weighing 20 tonne, had died after being washed ashore to Juhu beach and was buried beyond the high tide line there.
Last month, 45 short-finned whales washed up at a beach in Tamil Nadu's Tuticorin district.
The Bryde's Whale is an endangered species found in the Arabian Sea.
Carcasses of 45 Baleen Whales were washed ashore recently near Tiruchendur beach in Tamil Nadu while more than 250 stranded whales were pushed back into the deep sea.
In June last year, a 42-feet-long blue whale was washed ashore at Revdanda coast, about 17 km south of Alibaug in neighbouring Raigad district.
Forest officials had contacted marine biologists after spotting the whale while it was struggling to survive.
However, the whale died later.