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Cause of death to remain unknown for minke whale carcass that washed ashore in East Providence, R.I.

Cause of death to remain unknown for minke whale carcass that washed ashore in East Providence, R.I.

Boston Globe12-05-2025
A very putrid smelling whale carcass washed up on the shore of Bold Point Park. The RI DEM was notified and Mystic Aquarium was notified to investigate cause of death.
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But how exactly the mammal – likely a juvenile – may have died will remain a mystery, said
Sarah Callan, the aquarium's manager of animal rescue, on Monday.
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The same carcass was reported across the bay in Providence in January, but with limited access to the water there, crews were not able to move it, Dodge said.
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Kim Keough, spokesperson for the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, confirmed in an email the animal was 'the same minke whale observed in the area over the winter during the Providence River barge removal operations.'
'At this point, it has moved a little bit farther, but it's four months old – severely decomposed,' Callan said Monday.
'We wouldn't get any viable samples,' Callan added.
The whales are common in the waters off Rhode Island. However, Callan said since 2017, elevated numbers of minke whale mortalities have occurred, part of what's been called an
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According to the
In the last eight years, there have been 14 dead minke whales in Rhode Island alone, Callan said. A lot of them were clearly struck by vessels, although others have shown signs of infectious disease, she said.
'Unfortunately, this [most recent] one's going to kind of be a mystery because you kind of have to piece together a lot of different things to build the case,' she said.
Experts were not able to determine the sex of the whale, as researchers typically have to check the underside of the animal as well as the internal reproductive organs to confirm, Callan said.
According to Keough, the whale carcass will remain where it is.
'Given the slow but continuous decomposition over the past several colder months, officials have determined that the most appropriate course of action is to allow the whale to decompose naturally in place,' Keough wrote. 'Removal or burial is not feasible due to the whale's advanced decomposition and its current location. A necropsy would yield limited information about the cause of death, as significant time has passed since the initial stranding.'
Dodge reminded the public that although the whale is deceased, it remains protected by the federal 'Marine Mammal Protection Act,' which prohibits people from approaching or touching the animal and from harvesting anything from it.
Christopher Gavin can be reached at
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What do you do with thousands of dead Everglades pythons? Wear them.
What do you do with thousands of dead Everglades pythons? Wear them.

National Geographic

time18-07-2025

  • National Geographic

What do you do with thousands of dead Everglades pythons? Wear them.

Most Burmese python hunters dispose of their snakes after euthanizing them, but South Florida designer Elle Barbeito upcycles hers into accessories to help spread awareness about an ecological epidemic eating away at the Everglades. Photographs by Danielle Levitt Just after midnight, Elle Barbeito drove her Dodge pickup deep into the shadows of the Florida Everglades. After hours navigating narrow marsh roads, past towering bald cypresses and raucous shoots of bromeliads, she suddenly pulled onto the shoulder and aimed a flashlight at a writhing patch of prehistoric-looking ferns. 'Python!' Barbeito shouted, pointing to a metallic sheen of scales glistening like silken chain mail in the moonlight. The next part would require her gun. No one can say for certain how Burmese pythons arrived in the Everglades in the first place or how many there are today, though conservative estimates put their population in the tens of thousands. What we do know is that the voracious snakes are destroying one of the country's most important ecosystems by reproducing rapidly and feasting on just about anything they can fit their jaws around, from endangered wood rats to threatened wood storks. The snakes have few regional predators except alligators, so the only way to stop them is by culling them. Over the past 25 years, more than 23,500 pythons have been removed from southern Florida's wetlands through organized annual hunts, eradication agents hired by the state, and volunteers like Barbeito who help capture and kill them. While most snake hunters dump them or leave the carcasses to rot, Barbeito does things differently. After euthanizing the python, she carefully loaded its serpentine body into the back of her truck and took it home. Snake hunters like Barbeito slowly drive around the Everglades after dark, when nocturnal pythons are more active, sweeping roadside marshlands in the hope of spotting one. She often tags along with her dad, Mark Yon, who captures and euthanizes snakes as part of Florida's python elimination program. The 29-year-old, who comes from the world of New York fashion, hunts these enormous creatures and then repurposes their remains, transforming each one into a highly sought-after python-skin accessory. 'I get to have this connection with my material that most artists don't,' Barbeito says. She's developed a cult following for her limited-edition line of carefully sourced products, including bags and belts, which appeal to clients who want to wear reptile skin without some of the ethical complications. For years animal welfare advocates have encouraged shoppers to steer clear of animal-based leathers, prompting fashion companies to explore synthetic or vegan alternatives derived from things like mushrooms and apples. Now an increasing number of designers are recognizing how useful the leather of Burmese python skin from the Everglades can be. 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Barbeito isn't the only one who has noticed how sourcing python skin from the Everglades skirts many of the major dilemmas around using animal-based products in clothing. Since late 2020, a Miami-based start-up called Inversa has operated as a broker between independent Florida hunters—or 'invasive-removal specialists,' as Inversa CEO Aarav Chavda calls them—and high-end designers interested in using materials made of species like Burmese pythons or lionfish, a similarly damaging animal threatening native fish populations and coral reefs along Florida's coasts. While Barbeito runs a small, often bespoke operation, Inversa has a more industrial outlook. 'If we're going to tackle something as big as invasive species, we have to be thinking in terms of scale,' Chavda says. 'We have to be removing tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, eventually, millions, in order to really make a difference.' So far, there's more than enough supply to satisfy the growing demand. Inversa recently partnered with acclaimed sustainable fashion designer Gabriela Hearst on a line inspired by the snake goddess of Neolithic Europe, which included Burmese python pumps and bags. Like Barbeito, Hearst had never seen a textile that could have such an immediate impact on conservation. 'I was never a big subscriber to the mushroom leather, because I knew that it wasn't going to have the impact that this leather could,' Hearst says. 'It was exciting to work with something that is beautiful [and] also helping restore the environment.' "One of luxury designer Johanna Ortiz's recent collections included a belt made with invasive carp scales, and last year Gabriela Hearst showed a moto jacket and pumps made from the skin of Everglades pythons at Paris Fashion Week." 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Boston Globe

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50 years ‘Jaws,' the number of white sharks off Cape Cod is growing. Scientists say that's a good thing.

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Two whales found dead together on Florida beach, state says. Here's what we know
Two whales found dead together on Florida beach, state says. Here's what we know

Miami Herald

time20-06-2025

  • Miami Herald

Two whales found dead together on Florida beach, state says. Here's what we know

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