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Lydgate Beach Park closed on Kauaʻi due to efforts to remove beached whale

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Native Hawaiian practitioners conducted cultural protocols by the deceased whale on Jan. 28, 2023. Photo Credit: Hawai’i State Department of Land and Natural Resources

Updated at 6:42 p.m. on Jan. 29: Lydgate Beach Park, located between Līhue and Kapaʻa, will remain closed on Jan. 30 due to efforts to remove a deceased sperm whale that washed up on shore. The whale was discovered on Friday evening.

Original post: Due to the efforts to remove a deceased beached whale, Lydgate Beach Park on Kaua’i is closed until further notice.

Officials with the County of Kaua‘i’s Department of Parks and Recreation, Department of Public Works, Ocean Safety Bureau, Kaua‘i Police Department, Department of Land and Natural Resources and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are currently responding.

The cause of death of a 56-foot-long, 120,000-pound sperm whale that appeared on the reef fronting Lydgate Park won’t likely be determined for some time.

The whale was first reported Friday evening.

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On Saturday, a pair of county-owned excavators, one large and one small made numerous attempts to free the whale from the shoreline and move it onto the beach. High tide brought it to shore. 

A large excavator from the state Division of Forestry and Wildlife joined the two county machines in another attempt to free the massive animal from the shoreline, where it’s embedded in wet sand.  

A deceased 56-foot-long, 120,000-pound sperm whale washed on the shore of Lydgate Beach Park on Kaua’i.

Once the carcass is on dry ground, Dr. Kristi West and her team from the University of Hawai‘i Health and Stranding Lab will begin a preliminary investigation into the whale’s death. 

“There are many possible causes including disease, injuries from a vessel strike, entanglement with discarded fishing line or ingestion of plastic marine debris,” West said.  

Experts won’t be able to settle on an exact cause of death until lab tests are returned in several months.

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“It’s important for us to probe each death of our marine mammals, sentinel animals like this whale, as that can provide information and data that helps inform management decisions and can provide a more complete picture of species health,” she said. 

Saturday’s operation was under the watchful eye of Jamie Thomton, the Kaua‘i Stranding Coordinator with NOAA Fisheries, who said: “Based on how fresh the carcass is, the whale probably died in the last few days.” 

Native Hawaiian practitioners also viewed the day’s activities and conducted cultural protocols throughout the day. 

Mimi Olry, the Kaua‘i Stranding Response Coordinator with the state Division of Aquatic Resources said sperm whales don’t wash ashore on Kaua‘i all that often.

“This one happened at a busy beach park, so many people saw it and watched [Saturday’s] efforts, “she said. 

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Police lines were moved back as heavy equipment arrived on the scene and officers from the DLNR Division of Conservation and Resources Enforcement had to shoo several people off the beach or from the closed park area for their safety. 

Thomton said each stranding presents different challenges. Once the whale is on the sand he thinks the post-mortem exam will go smoothly. 

The remains of the whale will be buried in an area that has been approved by the State Historical Preservation Division to ensure no iwi kūpuna (ancestral remains) will be disturbed. 

Large mammal strandings demonstrate the high level of collaboration between federal, state and county agencies. 

Sperm whales are listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act and are protected under the ESA and the Marine Mammal Protection Act. It is against both federal and state law to remove any body parts or bones from these whales. 

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