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Feds to investigate spike in gray whale deaths on West Coast

NOAA Fisheries declared it an "unusual mortality event," providing additional resources to respond to the deaths and triggering the investigation into the cause.
Credit: AP
FILE - In this May 6, 2019 file photo, Duat Mai stands atop a dead whale at Ocean Beach in San Francisco. Federal scientists on Friday, May 31 opened an investigation into what is causing a spike in gray whale deaths along the West Coast this year. So far, about 70 whales have stranded on the coasts of Washington, Oregon, Alaska and California, the most since 2000. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

SAN FRANCISCO — U.S. scientists will investigate why an unusual number of gray whales are washing up dead on West Coast beaches.

About 70 whales have been stranded so far this year on the coasts of California, Oregon, Washington and Alaska, the most since 2000. About five more have been found on British Columbia beaches.

NOAA Fisheries on Friday declared it an "unusual mortality event," providing additional resources to respond to the deaths and triggering the investigation into the cause.

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The agency says the population of the gray whales has grown significantly in the last decade and is now estimated at 27,000. They were removed from the endangered species list in 1994.

In 2000, more than 100 washed up. A similar investigation into those deaths failed to identify a cause.

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