Baby dolphin spotted with pod off Yorkshire coast

A dark-grey baby bottlenose dolphin swimming next to an adult dolphin in the sea off the Yorkshire coastImage source, Robin Petch/Sea Watch Foundation
Image caption,

A calf was spotted among a pod of about 13 dolphins

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A pod of 40 bottlenose dolphins spotted off the Yorkshire coast is one of the biggest seen in the past 12 months, according to an expert.

The dolphins were reported off Filey, North Yorkshire, on Saturday. On the same day another group of about 13 was seen off the coast of Flamborough, East Yorkshire, just before 11:30 BST.

Robin Petch, of the Sea Watch Foundation, said a new-born calf was among the latter group and had been identified by foetal folds "showing it is no more than a few weeks old".

The creatures, which appear to have migrated from the Moray Firth in Scotland, were either hunting for food or had gathered for mating, Mr Petch added.

Image source, Robin Petch/Sea Watch Foundation
Image caption,

The new-born calf (far right) has been identified as "no more than a few weeks old"

"It's just so exciting when they do get together like that," said Mr Petch.

"You'll see them kind of rolling together, there's a lot of splashing and activity and kind of curling and twisting and tail slapping in the air."

The foundation – a marine environmental charity – is running its annual National Whale and Dolphin Watch survey to record a "snapshot" of cetacean movements around the UK coast.

Mr Petch said that while Cardigan Bay in Wales remained the best location to see an increasing number of cetaceans, the coastlines of Yorkshire and Northumberland were now among the "top places" for sightings.

Image source, Robin Petch
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Robin Petch says the coast of northern England is now one of the best places to see dolphins and whales

"Probably around a third" of what was the Scottish population of bottlenose dolphins was now living off Yorkshire and Northumbria – where there is an abundance of salmon, herring and other fish – for "most, if not all of the year".

"We have dolphins that are being seen regularly down here now throughout the year that haven't been seen in Scotland for five or six years, whereas previously they were there all the time," he added.

Several harbour porpoises and a minke whale were also spotted during an excursion by the charity on Saturday, along with more than 400 grey seals.

Image source, Robin Petch/Sea Watch Foundation
Image caption,

More than 400 grey seals were also spotted off the Flamborough coast

During its week-long whale and dolphin survey, the foundation is encouraging people to log sightings of cetacean movements around the coast, via an app called Sea Watcher, external.

Last year, the charity recorded 1,490 sightings around the British Isles. A total of 10,156 mammals were spotted, including 266 minke whales, 144 bottlenose dolphins, 38 killer whales and 24 humpback whales.

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