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ARCHIVED - Killer whales seen in Cartagena thought to have moved on to the Balearics
The whales are thought to have been drawn east from Gibraltar in their hunt for tuna
It is thought that a group of killer whales which was spotted on Sunday just off the coast of Punta Gavina in Formentera could well be the same animals which were seen last week in Cartagena, the first known sighting of the species in the Region of Murcia.
One leading expert backs the theory that the whales may be straying from their usual hunting grounds in and around the Strait of Gibraltar due to an increase in the number of bluefin tuna in the western Mediterranean, and that their journey east is a hunting trip. Killer whales are to be found wherever there is food for them, according to biologists, and if these specimens have indeed travelled from Cartagena to the Balearics it would appear that they are moving with purpose rather than drifting aimlessly.
The last known sightings of killer whales in the Balearics date from 1943, when a group was seen hunting pilot whales in the bay of Palma, and 1941, when a specimen measuring 5.3 metres was washed up on the beach of Canyamel.
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