Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 March 2025

Studying Beaked Whales entangled in Tuna nets in the northwest Indian Ocean.

Beaked Whales, Ziphiidae, spend the majority of their time in deep oceanic waters, spending most of their lives beyond the continental shelves, and little at the surface. This makes them one of the least well-understood groups of Cetaceans, or Mammals of any kind. Some species have few, if any, sitings ar sea, being known almost exclusively from bodies washed ashore in varying states of decomposition. Because of this, the taxonomy of Beaked Whales is less well-established than is the case for most Mammal groups, with new species and nomenclature revisions being published every few years. 

Studying Whales caught as bycatch offers a cost-effective way to study poorly understood Cetacean populations, providing insights into populations which can help shape conservation policies. Such data collection is often accomplished by training fishermen themselves as citizen scientists. Drift gillnets are widely used many parts of the world to target Tuna, but are also noted for the large amount of large-Vertebrate bycatch they produce. In the northwest Indian Ocean drift gillnets are widely used by the fishing fleets of Iran and Pakistan, presenting a threat to Whales in this area, but also presenting an opportunity for scientists to gather data on these Animals.

In a paper published in the journal Zoology in the Middle East on 13 February 2025, Muhammad Shoaib Kiani of the Institute of Marine Science at the University of KarachiMohsen Rezaie-Atagholipour of the Qeshm Environmental Conservation Institute, Rab Nawaz and Muhammad Moazzam of the World Wide Fund for Nature - Pakistan, Bushra Shafiq also of the  Institute of Marine Science at the University of Karachi, Haleh Ali Abed of the Midaf Nature Conservation Society, and Koen Van Waerebeek, also of the Qeshm Environmental Conservation Institute and of the Centro Peruano de Estudios Cetológicos, present the results of a long-term study of Beaked Whale entanglements in Tuna gillnets in Iranian and Pakistani waters.

A citizen science program was established in Pakistan in 2012, in which fishermen on pelagic gillnet Tuna vessels were trained to collect data on Cetacean bycatch. In Iran reviews of mass media at local and national levels, looking for Cetacean-related stories, have been carried out since 2018, and a series of interviews of fishermen was carried out in 2022.

Kiani et al. discovered eight incidents in which entangled Cetaceans could be identified as Beaked Whales in the waters of the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea, two in Iranian territory, five in Pakistani territory, and one in international waters.

The first recorded incident happened on 10 February 2015, when fishermen on board the Pakistani vessel Al-Azaan discovered a live Beaked Whale caught in a gillnet they had deployed 95 km to the west of the Swatch (the undersea canyon formed where the Indus River enters the ocean) and 177 km off the coast of Sindh, an area where the seafloor is about 1.5 km deep. 

Based upon video evidence, this Whale was estimated to be 5-6 m long, and slender with a slightly protrudent melon (mass of adipose tissue on the forehead), and a long snout without protruding teeth. This Animal lacked the scars associated with tooth-raking typically seen in male Beaked Whales, and is therefore assumed to have been a female.

The Whale had a brownish-grey dorsal surface, slightly paler on the head, and had a large, Dolphin-like fin about two thirds of the way along its body. This is, along with its location in the tropical Indian Ocean, is considered to be consistent with a Longman’s Beaked Whale, Indopacetus pacificus. This species was first described in 1928 from the skull of a Whale found in Queensland Australia in 1882, with a second skull being found on the shore of Somalia, East Africa, in 1955. For a long time, these two specimens were all that was known of this species, however, recent studies have established that Whales washed up on the shores of the Philippines, Maui (Hawaii), Taiwan, Myanmar, the Andaman Islands, South Africa, and Japan, previously identified as Southern Bottlenose Whales, Hyperoodon planifrons, were in fact Longman’s Beaked Whales, and based upon this data, 65 sightings of live Whales in the  Indian and Pacific oceans have been assigned to the species.

The Whale encountered by the Al-Azaan became entangled in a net as it was being retrieved, allowing the crew to release it without apparent harm by cutting away part of the net. This process took about 30 minutes, and while the Whale is thought to have been unharmed, one of the fishermen received minor injuries.

(a)-(h). Successive steps in gillnet disentanglement operation of a Longman’s Beaked Whale, Indopacetus pacificus, in Pakistani waters. Note the head with moderately bulbous melon (e), (h), long rostrum (f), (g), (h) tubular in dorsal view (h), limited linear scarring (e) and large falcate dorsal fin (f, g). Selected frames were taken from a video. Kiani et al. (2025).

The second recorded incident happened on 31 March 2017, when an un-named Pakistani vessel encountered a 4 m long Whale 383 km off the coast of Pakistan, again in the Swatch area, an area where the sea slightly more than 3 km deep. 

This Whale had a distinct, but non-bulbous melon, a long slender snout, and a low, sub-triangular dorsal fin. The skin of the Whale was a uniform grey, slightly darker towards the tail, and it had no visible scarring of any type. It was not possible to identify this Whale to species level, but it was probably a member of the genus Mesoplodon, possibly Deraniyagala’s Beaked Whale, Mesoplodon hotaula, or Ginkgo-toothed Beaked Whale, Mesoplodon ginkgodens, although this species has never been recorded in the Indian Ocean, or even Ramari’s Beaked Whale, Mesoplodon eueu, although this species tends  to lighten towards the tail, and is a cold-water species, never previously recorded in the western Indian Ocean north of Mozambique. 

The third incident was recorded in August 2017, when a fisherman from Bandar-e-Konarak on the coast of Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran, sent a video to the Iranian National News Agency, IRIB News, showing a Whale entangled in a gill net. This incident is thought to have happened in the waters of Iran’s Exclusive Economic Zone, and probably close to Bandar-e-Konarak. 

The Whale could be seen to blow, suggesting that it was alive and breathing. It appears to be a Beaked Whale with no visible teeth. The bulbosity of the melon cannot be determined from the video. The fluke (tail) of the Whale can be seen, and from comparison to the arm of a fisherman, is estimated to be between about 140 cm wide, which would equate to a Whale 4.7-4.9 m in length. The fluke also lacks a median notch, confirming that the Animal is a Ziphiid.

An unidentified middle-sized Beaked Whale, with a melon of unclear bulbosity, net-entangled within Iran’s Exclusive Economic Zone waters off Sistan and Baluchistan Province, northern Gulf of Oman, in August 2017. (a), (b) Flukes without central notch and tailstock; (c) the only registered blow and vague view of the head. Both Mesoplodon sp. and Indopacetus pacificus would be possible. Kiani et al. (2025).

The fourth incident occurred on 18 January 2018, when a small-to-medium sized Beaked Whale was recorded trapped in gillnet 474 km from the coast of Pakistan, an area where the sea is slightly under 3.2 km deep. This Whale was 3.5-4.5 m long, with a medium length snout and a non-bulbous melon and no central notch on its fluke; its colour and/or markings could not be determined due to poor light. This is consistent with it being a member of the genus Mesoplodon. The Pakistani fishermen who encountered this Whale were able to disentangle it from their nets, and report if swam away in good condition. 

The fifth incident occurred on 19 March 2019, when two Beaked Whales, interpreted as a mother and calf, became entangled in the same gillnet off Churna Island, 96 km from the coast of the Pakistani Mainland. The waters here are shallow, at 295 m.

The calf was described as the size of an adult Common Bottlenose Dolphin, making it 3.0-3.5 m in length, while it was not possible to estimate the size of the larger Whale. The smaller Whale had a dark grey upper surface,  and a whitish underside. It had a short snout, and no sign of a bulbous melon, its dorsal fin hooked, no notch could be seen in the tail. These Whale are also interpreted as belonging to the genus Mesoplodon. The fishermen reported successfully disentangling both Whales.

The sixth recorded incident happened in February 2022, when Iranian fishermen reported encountering a Whale caught in a drift gillnet 1300 km off the coast of Bandar-e-Beris in eastern Sistan and Baluchestan Province. Video footage of the incident shows a medium-sized Beaked Whale with a medium-length Dolphin-like beak, and a non-steeply sloping melon, consistent with a member of the genus Mesoplodon. The video also shows that the Whale has two apical or slightly sub-apical mandibular teeth, indicating that it was male, as well as a dark eye-patch, an almost straight mouth, and a small, slightly hooked tail. The length of the Whale is uncertain, but it appears to be about 4.5-5.5 m.

An unidentified Mesoplodon sp. bycaught in far offshore waters of the northern Arabian Sea, 1300 km from Bandar-e-Beris at the eastern side of Iran’s Sistan and Baluchestan Province, in February 2022. (a), (c) Two erupted (sub)apical mandibular teeth indicate an adult male. (b) Dolphin-like, medium-length rostrum, gently sloping melon and smallish dorsal fin. Kiani et al. (2025).

The final incident happened in early June 2023, when a large Beaked Whale became entangled in a drift gillnet in the coastal Iranian Gulf of Oman, about 37 km from the port of Chabahar in eastern Sistan and Baluchestan Province. This Animal was clearly an adult male, with numerous took-rake scars and erupted apical teeth. It was estimated to have been 5.8-6.0 m in length, with an erect, Dolphin-like dorsal fin, and way brownish grey in colour with a lighter head. This is interpreted as being consistent with either a Longman’s Beaked Whale, Indopacetus pacificus, or a Cuvier’s Beaked Whale, Ziphius cavirostris

An adult male Beaked Whale being liberated after accidental entanglement in Tuna gillnet in coastal waters of the Gulf of Oman, some 37 km from Chabahar, Iran, in early June  2023. (a) Large body size with two erupted teeth at the apex of the mandibula; (b) a tall, erect, falcate, Dolphin-like dorsal fin, a moderately long and well-defined rostrum; (c) with numerous tooth rakes on anterior body; and (d) some degree of bulbosity in the melon. The morphology of the Beaked Whale is congruent with Indopacetus pacificus, but Ziphius cavirostris cannot be excluded. Kiani et al. (2025).

The first of these incidents is regarded as the first record of Longman’s Beaked Whale, Indopacetus pacificus, in Pakistani waters, with incidents five and seven representing potential additional sightings. A beached individual assigned to the species was recorded in Gujarat State, India, in 2014, making the Pakistan entanglement the second record of the species in the northwest Indian Ocean. Previously a skull has been recorded from the coast of Somalia in 1955, a member of the species was sighted from Socotra Island, Yemen in 1971, and another in the waters of the southern Bay of Bengal in 2009. Five Longman’s Beaked Whales have been recorded as bycatch from Sri Lanka, although these have been disputed, and fourteen sightings and a stranding recorded from the Maldives. 

Incidents two, four, six, and possibly five represent the first records of Mesoplodon sp. in Iranian and Pakistani waters, although none of these specimens could be confidently identified to species level. 

Drift gillnets are considered to be one of the most significant anthropogenic threats to Whales, although evidence to support this is absent in many areas. Kiani et al.'s study shows entanglement is a clear threat to Beaked Whales in the northwestern Indian Ocean, as while all of the reported Whales were freed, it is likely that a greater number of Whales were not released safely, and therefore not reported.

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Saturday, 25 November 2023

A hoard of coins from the Indus Valley City of Mohenjo Daro.

The Indus Valley Civilization was a Bronze Age civilization in northern South Asia, contemporary with the Old Kingdom in Egypt and the Sumerian Civilization of Mesopotamia. Spread across what is now Afghanistan, Pakistan, and northwest India, the Indus Valley Civilization is generally considered to have built the first cities in South Asia, as well as a major centre of Bronze Age technological innovation, although its language has never been translated, so that much about the civilization remains a mystery. The largest of the cities constructed by the Indus Valley people was Mohenjo Daro, located in the  Larkana District of Sindh Province, Pakistan. Mohenjo Daro has founded around 2500 BC, and at its height had a population of about 40 000. It was abandoned in about 1700 BC, along with the other major cities of the Indus Valley Civilization, although why this happened remains as mysterious as many other things about the culture.

Ruins aof the city of Mohenjo Daro in Sindh, Pakistan. Saqib Qayyum/Wikimedia Commons.

On Wednesday 15 November 2023, a team of conservators working on the western side of Mohenjo Daro stupa uncovered a jar of copper coins, the first coins uncovered at the site since 1931, although it is unlikely that they date back to the Indus Valley Civilization, which is not known to have produced coins. The hoard unearthed in 1931 comprised 4348 copper coins dating from the Kushan Empire, which lasted from about 30 AD till its conquest by the Gupta Empire in 375 AD, although its coins would have remained in circulation somewhat longer. 

A pot of copper coins discovered at Mohenjo Daro in Sindh Province, Pakistan, on 15 November 2023. Saeed Memon/Dawn.

The coins together weigh about five and a half kilograms, and are currently fused together into a single amalgam. It is hoped that it will be possible both to separate them and clean them sufficiently to make out the inscriptions on their surfaces, although this is likely to take some time. It is planned that once prepared, they will be placed on display at the Mohenjo Daro Museum in Larkarna.

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Saturday, 17 June 2023

Cyclone Biparjoy makes landfall in Gujarat State, India.

Cyclone Biparjoy made landfall in Gujarat State, close to the border with Pakistan, on the evening of Thursday 15 June 2023, bringing with it sustained wind speeds of 85 km per hour (a sustained wind speed is a wind speed maintained for a minute or longer) and gusts of up to 105 km per hour. Two people are known to have died following the event, described as a father and son who entered a flooded gully in an attempt to rescue some Goats, with 22 people reported injured in India and Pakistan. A much larger number of casualties was avoided by the evacuation of about 175 000 people from coastal areas in both countries, something made possible by satellite-tracking of tropical storms, which formerly killed thousands of people in South Asia every year. 

Flooding and storm damage in the Port of Jakhau, in the Kutch District of Gujarat State, following the passage of Cyclone Biparjoy. AP.

Tropical storms, called Cyclones in the Indian Ocean and South Pacific, are caused by solar energy heating the air above the oceans, which causes the air to rise leading to an inrush of air. If this happens over a large enough area the inrushing air will start to circulate, as the rotation of the Earth causes the winds closer to the equator to move eastwards compared to those further away (the Coriolis Effect). This leads to tropical storms rotating clockwise in the southern hemisphere and anticlockwise in the northern hemisphere. These storms tend to grow in strength as they move across the ocean and lose it as they pass over land (this is not completely true: many tropical storms peter out without reaching land due to wider atmospheric patterns), since the land tends to absorb solar energy while the sea reflects it.

The formation of a tropical cyclone. Natural Disaster Management.

Despite the obvious danger of winds of this speed, which can physically blow people, and other large objects, away as well as damaging buildings and uprooting trees, the real danger from these storms comes from the flooding they bring. Each drop millibar drop in air-pressure leads to an approximate 1 cm rise in sea level, with big tropical storms capable of causing a storm surge of several meters. This is always accompanied by heavy rainfall, since warm air over the ocean leads to evaporation of sea water, which is then carried with the storm. These combined often lead to catastrophic flooding in areas hit by tropical storms. 

The formation and impact of a storm surge. eSchoolToday.

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Sunday, 23 April 2023

Eight confirmed deaths following landslide on the Pakistan/Afghanistan border.

Eight people have now been confirmed dead following a landslide close to the town of Torkham on the Pakistan/Afghanistan border on Tuesday 18 April 2023. The majority of the deceased are understood to be Afghan truck drivers who were cooking beside their trucks while waiting for a border crossing to open. The landslide buried about fifteen container trucks, carrying goods from Pakistan into Afghanistan, with several people being injured as well as those killed. Initial rescue attempts are understood to have been hampered by a fire triggered by the landslide crushing a gas cylinder used for cooking, while later in the week further problems were caused by heavy rainfall and a secondary landslide.

Rescue workers searching the remains of trucks destroyed by a landslide on the Pakistan/Afghanistan border on 18 April 2023. Rescue 1122 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The immediate cause of the landslide appears to have been heavy rainfall falling in the area. Landslides are a common problem after severe weather events, as excess pore water pressure can overcome cohesion in soil and sediments, allowing them to flow like liquids. Approximately 90% of all landslides are caused by heavy rainfall. Flooding and landslides are common at this time of year in northern Pakistan, where rising temperatures at the start of summer lead to thawing snow and ice in the mountains of the region. However the area does not typically receive large amounts of rainfall at this time of year, although such events seem to be becoming more common with the changing climate.

A huge landslide on the Torkham Export Road, close to the Torkham border crossing linking Pakistan and Afghanistan. Pakistan Armed Forces News/Twitter.

The Himalayan provinces of Pakistan are extremely prone to landslides, due to a number of active faults in the area, these being driven by the northward movement of the Indian Plate, which is pushing into Eurasia at a rate of 40 mm a year. This causes earthquakes on both plates, as well as the folding and uplift that has created the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau.

Block diagram showing how the impact of the Indian Plate into Eurasia is causing uplift on the Tibetan Plateau. Jayne Doucette/Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

However, the area around Torkham is not generally prone to large landslides, even at times of year when high rainfall is expected, suggesting that something else may have contributed to this event. Landslide expert Dave Petley has suggested on his blog that this may relate to road widening activity at the landslide site, which may have undermined a section of rock above an unconformity in the rockface, leading to a plane of weakness along which the rock could fail.

Google Earth images of the site of the Torkham landslide in 2016 and 2021. Dave Petley/The Landslide Blog.

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Saturday, 10 September 2022

At least 32 million people displaced as one third of Pakistan covered by floodwaters.

At least 32 million people are thought to have been displaced as one third of Pakistan has been covered by floodwaters this month, with some estimates placing the figure as high as 50 million. At this time almost 1400 people are known to have died in the floods, including over 400 children. Experts at the Aga Khan University in Karachi have estimated that at least 650 000 pregnant women are among the displaced, with about 70 000 due to give birth in the next month. Estimates of the number of people who will have permanently lost their homes varies between 500 000 and a million.

Flooding in the Dadu District of Sindh Province, Pakistan. Fareed Khan/AP.

The flooding events are thought to be directly linked to rising global temperatures, with the monsoon rains, which began to fall in the middle of June, being the heaviest ever recorded in the country, 4.64 times the average rainfall for the past 30 years. The problem has been exaggerated by melting glaciers in the Himalayas. Seasonal glacial melting is normal feature of the region, but these glaciers are now melting at a much higher rate, leading both to flood events now, and fears that they will disappear in the near future, leading to a much shorter crop-growing season as water availability becomes entirely reliant on the monsoon. Pakistan's previous worst ever flood event occurred in 2010, when the flow of water on the Indus River reached over 11.3 million litres per second; this year it is expected to pass 19.8 million litres per second.

Sindh Province, Pakistan, where the River Indus has burst its banks creating a lake over 100 km wide. Reuters.

As well as the immediate effects of the flooding, there are concerns about the impact this will have on the people of Pakistan both in the coming winter and the longer term. Around 80% of the crops in Sindh Province are thought to have been destroyed, and the vast amounts of standing water left by the flooding are likely to lead to epidemics of Malaria and water-born diseases. The loss of crops is likely to impact not just Pakistan's ability to feed itself, but the loss of much of the revenue earned from growing Cotton, and the accompanying loss of income from manufacturing garments. The flooding is also calculated to have killed over 750 000 head of livestock, over 5700 km of roads and almost 250 bridges. The United Nations has launched an appeal for US$160 million to get Pakistan over the immediate crisis, but has warned that the country is likely to suffer direct economic losses in excess of US$30 billion as a result of the floods, and that the cost of rebuilding the country will cost much more. 

Flooding close to Lake Manchar in Sindh Province, which has also burst its banks. Getty Images.

Pakistan is the world's fifth most populous country, with a population of 220 million, and considered to be one of the ten countries most vulnerable to global warming by the United Nations, despite producing only about 1% of the world's greenhouse gasses. 

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Monday, 1 August 2022

Magnitude 5.6 Earthquake off the coast of Balochistan Province, Pakistan.

The United States Geological Survey recorded a Magnitude 5.6 Earthquake at a depth of 10.0 km, roughly 14 km off the coast of the city of Pasni in Balochistan Province, Pakistan, slightly after 6.40 pm local time (slightly after 2.40 pm GMT), on Sunday 31 July 2022.There are no reports of any damage or injuries associated with this event, though it was felt locally.

The location of the 31 July 2022 Balochistan Earthquake. USGS.

Pakistan lies on the boundary between the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates, which runs through northern Afghanistan. The Indian Plate is moving northward relative to the Eurasian Plate, causing folding and uplift along this boundary, which has led to the formation of the Hindu Kush Mountains of Afghanistan, the Himalayas and the other mountain ranges of Central Asia., and which makes the nations in this boundary zone prone to Earthquakes.

Plate boundaries and movements beneath southern Pakistan, Iran and the Arabian Sea. University of Southampton.

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