Mystery over humpback whale sightings in English Channel
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The 30-tonne mammals have been spotted from Sussex and the Isles of Scilly over the last month. A surge in humpback whale sightings reported across the English Channel over the last month has whale watchers puzzled. The Sussex Dolphin Project said the 30-tonne mammals have been spotted from every between Rye, Pett Level, Fairlight, Hastings and St Leonards.
There have been 17 sightings of the whales around the Isles of Scilly, off the coast of Cornwall, between 29 December and 8 January this year, The Guardian reported. “We believe the humpbacks that pass through the Eastern English Channel are coming from the feeding grounds in the Arctic Circle and travelling South to warmer waters often used for breeding grounds,” Thea Taylor of the Dolphin Project told the BBC.
“They would usually travel along the West Coast of the UK, and we do not currently know what causes them to travel down the East Coast.”. An awe-struck resident of West Sussex described one of the animals “putting on a show” for her as she watched on.
“The whale was sort of just coming up, then suddenly he just started breaching out of the water and put on a proper display for us,” she told the BBC. Traditionally, the whales move around the western side of Britain but some are now swimming down the east coast and through the Strait of Dover – possibly re-establishing ancestral routes that were abandoned when so many humpbacks were slaughtered by 19th- and 20th-century whale-hunters.