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WHALES AHOY
Two more endangered right whale calves spotted off Massachusetts coast
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Apr 15, 2019

Researchers have spotted another two right whales off the coast of Massachusetts, bringing this year's total to three. Last year, scientists failed to spot a single calf.

The mini baby boom is good news for the endangered species. Scientists estimate there are only around 450 right whales living in the ocean.

The two new whales were spotted in the southern portion of the Cape Cod Bay. Scientists from Center for Coastal Studies in Rhode Island spotted the two calves each swimming with their mothers.

The new right whales were born off the coast of Florida and Georgia during the winter. Right whales mate and give birth along the Southeastern coast and feed in the waters just off the New England coast.

Earlier this month, scientists spotted the first right whale calf of the season during an aerial survey.

Because right whales boast a large blubber content and tend to hug the shore, they were a popular target for whalers. By the end of the 19th century, whalers had nearly wiped out the species.

Today, right whales are protected. In 2016, the federal government expanded the species' protected habitat along the East Coast. But the North Atlantic right whale remains one of the most endangered large whale species in the world, with boat strike and entanglement in fishing gear the greatest threats.

The species' close relative on the other side of North America, the North Pacific right whale, is even more endangered, with just 200 individuals remaining.


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WHALES AHOY
Plaques linked to Alzheimer's found in the brains of stranded dolphins
Washington (UPI) Mar 26, 2019
Scientists have identified amyloid plaques, the folded proteins linked with Alzheimer's, in the brains of dolphins stranded on the beaches of Florida and Massachusetts. Analysis of the marine mammal brains also revealed the presence of BMAA, a toxin produced by cyanobacterial blooms. "We found β-amyloid plaques and damaged neurons in brain tissues from dolphins that had died on the beaches of Florida and Massachusetts," Dr. David Davis, a neurologist at the University of Miami, said in ... read more

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