Water-Related News

UPDATE: Beach reopened after stranded whale removed from Service Club Park beach in Venice

9:30 AM 3/13 UPDATE: Service Club Park is now open, and the No Swim Advisory issued March 11 for beaches from Caspersen to the South Jetty has been lifted as a full tidal cycle has occurred since the deceased whale was removed from the area yesterday afternoon.


The 50-feet-long whale was beached on a sandbar about 50 yards out in Venice. Weather prevented a rescue and the whale died between 3 and 4 a.m. Monday.

A sperm whale stranded on a sandbar off Venice Beach died early Monday morning.

The animal was stuck in the waves and sand Sunday morning. The Venice Police Department, Sarasota County Sheriff's Office, Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission and Mote Marine Laboratory were unsuccessful in rescuing the whale due to heavy winds and surf.

Jessica Powell, with NOAA Fisheries Southeast Regional Office in St. Petersburg, confirmed that the whale died overnight.

"Unfortunately, the animal passed, " she said. "Right now, the teams are mustering. The idea is to pull the animal onto the beach, which, you can imagine, takes a lot of logistics, a lot of heavy equipment. This is a very large animal, we're estimating around 60,000 pounds."

Powell said the whale would have a necropsy performed on it after it is brought to the beach.

"It helps us understand why the animal was sick," she said. "It will help us understand more about sperm whales ... help us do a better job of understanding these animals," Powell said.

The FWC on Sunday night said that water conditions were too dangerous to approach the whale by boat to attempt to give the animal a sedative. The whale was estimated to be approximately about 50 feet long.

Another assessment was made at low tide, shortly after 7 p.m. Sunday.

Biologists were hopeful for a successful rescue Monday as weather conditions became more favorable, but the whale died between 3 and 4 a.m.