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Scientists find rare tusked whale alive at sea for the first time — and shoot it with a crossbow

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Rare tusked whales have been identified and photographed alive at sea for the first time following a herculean research effort off the shores of Mexico, a new study finds.

The newly-sighted cetaceans are ginkgo-toothed beaked whales (Mesoplodon ginkgodens), which were previously only known from dead individuals that had washed ashore and from bycatch. This isn’t all that unusual for beaked whales, which are deep divers and notoriously cryptic, spending their lives away from coastlines.

A photo of an adult male ginkgo-toothed beaked whale with a tusk and scars.

A bruised and scarred adult male ginkgo-toothed beaked. The white of what looks like its eye is actually a tusk for battling. The tip of the tusk (the orange bit) is worn. (Image credit: Craig Hayslip)

The hunt for and subsequent discovery of the elusive creatures was sparked by a recording of a distinct echolocation pulse in the North Pacific. Researchers began searching for the animals responsible for the mysterious sonar signal in 2020, and in June of 2024, it led them to a single beaked whale. Within days of that sighting, the team then found a small group of the whales, including a battle-scarred adult male and adult female with a calf.

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