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Brainstorming sessions followed. Paxarms, a New Zealand-based company with experience taking tissue samples from whales and remotely drugging sheep, built the team an airgun capable of hurling a 2-foot dart at a whale. The system comes with a distance finder, so the force of the shot can be adjusted depending on range. Once a dart strikes, the pressurized drugs are injected within seconds. Each dart is attached to a buoy that creates drag. As the whale swims, the buoy gradually pries the needle free. There is a risk that too much medication could cause a whale to become disoriented and possibly drown. But scientists say that right whales are more buoyant than some other species and they started experimenting with low doses of drugs that can be reversed. After testing on carcasses and beached whales, researchers first used the dart gun on a whale initially spotted off the Georgia coast in January 2009. The first two attempts failed. On a third try, boat crews said the whale was less hostile, allowing boats to get close and cut line. A second test began on Christmas Day when a 2-year-old right whale was spotted tangled off Florida. Trained responders from Georgia and Florida's wildlife agencies cut away 150 feet of rope from the whale using traditional techniques. But they still could not free the whale from a severe tangle wrapping around its mouth and its flippers. Scientists decided to try sedation. Leaving by boat from Port Canaveral, Fla., they reached the whale in about an hour, attached a satellite tag to its skin and shot the whale with sedatives. "There was a noticeable decrease in speed," Jamison said of the whale. "There was a noticeable decrease in boat evasiveness." The boat crew cut away line from both sides of the mouth. While a small piece was left in the whale's mouth, the animal will hopefully spit it out as it feeds. Satellite data show the whale is heading north and they hope it will reach the nutrient-rich waters of New England. ___ Online: NOAA: Sedation research paper:
http://www.nero.noaa.gov/whaletrp/index.html
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/
10.1371/journal.pone.0009597
[Associated
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