First responders train for humpback whale disentanglement

DLNR / contributed

Crew member on the support boat preps a grappling hook in an effort to handoff inflatable’s trailing gear.

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Crew being towed in inflatable attempts to attached trailing gear.

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A mock wooden whale tail, draped with various sizes of fishing line is prepped for launch and testing.

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Ed Lyman NOAA’s Regional Large Whale Entanglement Response Coordinator discuss with the crew using scuba tank to inflate a zodiac.

DLNR / contributed

Crew being towed in inflatable attempts to attach trailing gear to the mock whale tail.

DLNR / contributed

Lyman in cockpit of boat holds an onboard briefing with the crew and trainees roles for safety.

A dozen or more times each season, humpback whales while on their principal breeding and calving grounds within the Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary or nearby waters get spotted entangled in fishing gear or marine debris.

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