Public asked to keep a look-out for emaciated dolphin carcass

Public asked to keep a look-out for emaciated dolphin carcass

The creature, which looked underweight and had injuries suggesting that it had had something wrapped around its beak, was found behind the Royal Channel Islands Yacht Club.

However, fisheries officers have not yet been able to collect the carcass to conduct post-mortem examinations.

Paul Chambers, marine and coastal manager for the States’ Fisheries and Marine Resources Department, said that the dolphin looked ‘emaciated’.

‘It is a female common dolphin and obviously has some injuries to its snout area.

‘It looks as if something became wrapped around its beak and there are a series of very deep injuries.

‘It could have been a piece of rubbish that got wrapped around its beak or it could have got caught in fishing gear and struggled to get out,’ he said.

‘It did look emaciated and could have starved to death but I will have to wait for the dolphin to be recovered – I cannot guarantee the cause of death.’

Mr Chambers added that staff from his section had gone down to the beach to pick up the animal yesterday morning but had been unable to locate it.

‘The dolphin may have drifted back out to sea but, with the tides at the moment, it will probably come back in again,’ he said.

‘If we manage to get it back in we will look at the layers of fat – it looked quite thin and it did not have any bulk at the top of the shoulders – and we will also have a look at its sides.

‘We work with the Zoological Society of London and we will see what their opinion is.’

Mr Chambers added that he did not think the creature would have drifted far and asked for people to contact the department if they spotted it.

He also said that the species was not one which was commonly seen close to the Island’s shores.

‘The common dolphin is more of an offshore species found to the west and north-west in deeper waters but they are occasionally seen in shallow waters,’ he said.

‘That does bring it into potential contact with trawlers occasionally, but it is impossible to tell if that is how it died.

‘It looks as if it has been dead for several days and has drifted a few miles.’

  • Anyone who sees the dolphin should call Fisheries and Marine Resources on 441600.
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