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How a dead humpback whale ended up in a forest near the Amazon River

When local fishermen were walking through a mangrove forest in Brazil, they came across something that shouldn't be there: the carcass of a humpback whale.
Bicho D'água Team via CNN
When local fishermen were walking through a mangrove forest in Brazil, they came across something that shouldn't be there: the carcass of a humpback whale.
SOURCE: Bicho D'água Team via CNN
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How a dead humpback whale ended up in a forest near the Amazon River
When local fishermen were walking through a mangrove forest in Brazil, they came across something that shouldn't be there: the carcass of a humpback whale.The baby whale likely was lost at sea and died of starvation or some unknown cause, according to nonprofit research group Bicho D'agua.The tides washed the whale's body to shore at Araruna Beach in the city of Soure, said Bicho D'agua oceanographer Maura Sousa. It's located on the island of Marajo, which sits at the mouth of the Amazon River."During this season, the tide normally rises twice a day to almost 13 feet and floods the mangrove forest, bringing lots of trash, including trash from ships from a lot of places in the world," Sousa said."This explains why an inflated carcass, due to the gases of the decomposition, was dragged into the mangrove forest," she said.The 26-foot-long whale likely died four or five days before fishermen found it in the mangroves on Friday, she said. The fishermen notified the research group of the whale's carcass, which lay some 50 feet from shore.Whales such as this one are common in the South Atlantic, but not usually at this time of year, Sousa said. The whales that come to the coast of Brazil to mate typically spend their winters in Antarctica.This one could be a North Atlantic whale, she said. Researchers are performing DNA tests to determine where the humpback came from.The Federal University of Para's pathology laboratory is performing the necropsy — an autopsy performed on an animal. The results, which will be available in about 20 days, will give researchers a better idea of the whale's cause of death.

When local fishermen were walking through a mangrove forest in Brazil, they came across something that shouldn't be there: the carcass of a humpback whale.

The baby whale likely was lost at sea and died of starvation or some unknown cause, according to nonprofit research group Bicho D'agua.

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The tides washed the whale's body to shore at Araruna Beach in the city of Soure, said Bicho D'agua oceanographer Maura Sousa. It's located on the island of Marajo, which sits at the mouth of the Amazon River.

"During this season, the tide normally rises twice a day to almost 13 feet and floods the mangrove forest, bringing lots of trash, including trash from ships from a lot of places in the world," Sousa said.

"This explains why an inflated carcass, due to the gases of the decomposition, was dragged into the mangrove forest," she said.

The 26-foot-long whale likely died four or five days before fishermen found it in the mangroves on Friday, she said. The fishermen notified the research group of the whale's carcass, which lay some 50 feet from shore.

Whales such as this one are common in the South Atlantic, but not usually at this time of year, Sousa said. The whales that come to the coast of Brazil to mate typically spend their winters in Antarctica.

This one could be a North Atlantic whale, she said. Researchers are performing DNA tests to determine where the humpback came from.

The Federal University of Para's pathology laboratory is performing the necropsy — an autopsy performed on an animal. The results, which will be available in about 20 days, will give researchers a better idea of the whale's cause of death.