P.E.I. family gets close-up look at beluga - Action News
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PEI

P.E.I. family gets close-up look at beluga

A Charlottetown family got a close-up look at a beluga whale that has been spotted swimming in P.E.I. waters the last several days.

'Not too often we have a beluga whale swimming around in our backyard'

The whale swam close to a family's dock in Lewis Point Park in Charlottetown. (Submitted by Randy McQuaid)

A Charlottetown family was charmed by the sight of a beluga whale swimming close to their dock in Lewis Point Park Monday night but luckily, not too mesmerized to grab some video.

A beluga has been seen since last week in waters around Mount Stewart, in the Charlottetown Harbour andin the Meadowbank area of the West River and was even temporarily caught up in some fish nets, but managed to free itself.

Randy McQuaid took the video at about7 p.m. Monday as he was on the dock with his son Matthew and his friend.

The video showsthe beluga swimmingaround for a while then departing.

"Not too often we have a beluga whale swimming around in our backyard in Charlottetown," commented McQuaid's wife, Katherine Josey McQuaid, as she posted the video to Facebook.

Belugas are an endangered species that usually live in groups, and are noted for their pure white skins. This one may havebecome separated from its group because of ship noise or ice movement in the winter or spring or simply because the whale has an adventurous personality, researchers say.

Robert Michaud, a biologist and the scientific director for the Group for Research and Education in Quebec, saidit's doubtful this beluga is the same one that was hanging around in Summerside Harbour last winter named Nepi, a whale rescued from a river inNew Brunswick in June 2017.

"There are no signs suggesting it would be Nepi, and if it was Nepimy guess is that it would be much more inquisitive, more interested into humans, into boats, into wharves, and so far this animal has kept its distance," he said.

"This is maybe the best news of this sad story. These lost whales are at risk andthe best thing for them is to avoid too much intimate contact with humans because then they have no motivation to leave."

Federal regulations require people to keep a 100-metre distance from marine mammals, but this beluga seemsoblivious to the rules.

A slow decline has been observed in theSt. Lawrence Estuary population of belugas since the early 2000s, with a population size estimated at 900 individuals in 2012, according to DFO's website.

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