Dear MARMAMers, on behalf of my coauthors, I am very happy to announce the
publication in JMBA of the article "Successful rescue of orca (Orcinus
orca) in Venezuela: first mass stranding event in the Wider Caribbean
Region" (https://doi.org/10.1017/S0025315425000207, abstract below). The
article is open access and can be downloaded it from this link:

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-the-marine-biological-association-of-the-united-kingdom/article/successful-rescue-of-orca-orcinus-orca-in-venezuela-first-mass-stranding-event-in-the-wider-caribbean-region/83648D0941214BB43253B1076D8BBFD1#metrics


With warm regards,

Jaime

Abstract

In the Caribbean Sea, orcas (Orcinus orca, also known as killer whales) are
present throughout the year. The most recent review confirmed seven
strandings of the species in the Caribbean Sea in the period May 1851 to
January 2023, all of which were single strandings and only one of which
occurred in Venezuela. In this publication we document the circumstances of
the successful rescue, by local fishers and authorities, of seven orcas
that stranded in August 2023 on the coast of the State of Sucre,
north-eastern Venezuela. Worldwide, this is only the second mass stranding
of the species within the tropics (23.5°N to 23.5°S). We also documented
the presence of a probable whalesucker (Remora australis) on a juvenile
orca. The present case represents the first mass stranding event of orcas
in Venezuela and the Caribbean Sea and only the second in a tropical
location worldwide.
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