Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Marine Animal Disturbance Alert: New Zealand & Australia

Current Alert Status: High Vigilance (March 26 – March 31, 2026)

Coastal communities, mariners, and wildlife volunteers across New Zealand and Australia are advised to maintain a high state of vigilance regarding unusual marine mammal behavior and potential stranding events. Following the recent peak of the M2025-F1 (The Puppis Source) meteor activity on March 21, we are currently within a critical observation window for deep-water species.

The Nature of the Disturbance

The primary concern involves "slow-burning" atmospheric entries. Unlike typical meteors, these objects penetrate deep into the stratosphere before undergoing terminal airbursts. These high-energy explosions generate low-frequency pressure waves—infrasound—that can travel vast distances through the ocean. For deep-diving species like Beaked Whales and Pilot Whales, these sudden acoustic pulses can cause severe disorientation or a "startle response," leading pods to flee toward shallower, hazardous coastal waters.

Key Risk Zones

New Zealand: Focus remains on Farewell Spit and the Golden Bay region. These areas act as natural "whale traps" where disoriented pods can easily become caught by rapidly receding tides.

Australia: High alert for the Bass Strait, Tasmania, and the Southern Western Australian coast. Recent sightings of deep-water species in unusual surface patterns—including rare Beaked Whale sightings near Bremer Bay—suggest ongoing acoustic stress in the offshore canyons.

What to Look For

Near-Shore Sightings: Any deep-water species (Beaked Whales, Pilot Whales, or large pods of Orca) spotted unusually close to the surf line.

Unusual Social Behavior: Excessive "huddling" or agitated, erratic swimming patterns in pods near the coast.

The 72-Hour Echo: We are currently in the "lag window" where the physical effects of weekend atmospheric events often manifest as coastal strandings.

Action Required

If you observe whales or dolphins in distress, swimming toward shallow water, or already stranded, please contact your local stranding network immediately. In New Zealand, contact Project Jonah or the Department of Conservation. In Australia, alert ORRCA or your state's wildlife authority. Do not attempt to refloat large animals without professional guidance, as they may be suffering from internal acoustic trauma.

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Marine Animal Disturbance Alert: New Zealand & Australia

Current Alert Status: High Vigilance (March 26 – March 31, 2026) Coastal communities, mariners, and wildlife volunteers across New Zealand ...