|      Specially    trained divers recently freed a humpback whale    swimming off the island of Maui from a tangle of rope, a potentially    life-threatening situation for the animal. A tour vessel and a U.S.    Coast Guard aircraft initially spotted the whale on March 8;the animal had    small-gauge line cutting into its tail, according to a release from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Marine Sanctuaries. Observers found the    whale in the waters of Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine    Sanctuary, where humpbacks migrate each winter to mate, calve and nurse their    young. A response effort, led by    the sanctuary and working under NOAA's Marine Mammal    Health and Stranding Response Program, was quickly launched, the    release said. Divers cut away 40 feet (12 meters) of trailing line, but    couldn't completely free the whale. However, they attached a    satellite-tag buoy to the whale and relocated it between Kaho'olawe and    Lana'I on Monday (March 11); there, they were able to remove the rest of the    gear tangled around the animal.  Altogether, rescuers    removed more than 200 feet (61 m) of line and two buoys from around the    whale. Neither of those two buoys identify where the gear came from, so the    source likely won't ever be known, the release said. So far, only three    humpback whales have been found entangled this season, about one-third the    typical reports by this point. This effort was the first successful rescue of    the season, the release said. Getting entangled in fishing    gear can kill a whale by causing it to drown or starve, by getting caught in    its mouth, by exhausting the animal as the creature drags gear behind it, or    by causing injuries that lead to infection or blood loss. Copyright 2013 LiveScience,    a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be    published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  |    
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