A POST-MORTEM will be carried out on the whale to try to discover what caused it to swim into Chichester Harbour.
When the veterinary team got to the whale for a second time it had beached itself on East Winner Sandbank and was lying on its side in a rut it had created thrashing about trying to free itself.
Once the injection had been given it took about 20 m
inutes for the mammal to die. Richard Edward, a veterinary surgeon at Alphapet Veterinary Clinic in Bognor Regis, gave the injection.
He said: "It's a very potent injection so when I give it we need someone there ready with the antidote just in case I accidently inject myself.
"It immediately sedated the whale so it felt nothing and gave it a peaceful death. Without us stepping in it could have taken about a week to die.'
Once everyone was sure the whale had died it was attached to a buoy until RNLI crews could get to it and tow it back to land. Last night it was taken to a landfill site where the post-mortem will be carried out.
Paul Jepson, a vet from the Zoological Society of London, said: "We will be looking to see if it was ill, or another reason that caused the whale to swim here."
Samples will be sent for testing with results expected back in a few weeks.
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