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A humpback whale that was the focus of a high-profile private rescue in Germany has been found dead off the Danish island of Anholt, Danish authorities said.
The animal was first reported stranded on a sandbank off Germany’s Baltic coast on 23 March and was later coaxed onto a water-filled barge and released into the North Sea in late April by two German entrepreneurs.
A GPS tracker fitted during the private operation enabled officials to identify the carcass when it washed up near Anholt in mid-May.
Denmark’s Environmental Protection Agency said teams attempted on 21-22 May to tow the bloated carcass about 57km to the port of Grenaa for a post-mortem and sampling, but the initial effort was paused after the whale became stranded on a sandbank.
Authorities warned islanders to keep away because the decomposing animal may carry disease and build-up of internal gas risks explosion.
German scientists and wildlife groups had earlier criticised the private rescue, saying the whale was weak and the intervention might worsen its condition.
Danish officials plan further removal attempts and hope to recover the tracker and obtain scientific samples.
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🕰️ The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
Friday, May 22, 2026 18:14 UTC
Humpback dies after private German rescue
Tuesday, May 19, 2026 18:11 UTC
Denmark moves dead humpback 'Timmy' from Anholt




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