The bottlenose dolphin, first seen carrying the calf on Tuesday, is “displaying strong maternal bond behavior,” the New Zealand Department of Conservation said in a news release .

A female dolphin has been spotted carrying her dead calf in a heartbreaking scene in New Zealand ’s Bay of Islands this week.

If you are in the Bay of Islands please take extra care around dolphins – there is a dead bottlenose calf being carried by her mother and they need space. The mother is displaying maternal bond behaviour and she needs extra space and respect to grieve: https://t.co/rvrOR78sTN pic.twitter.com/giKxAvDUv9

The department has urged boaters to give the mourning mother space.

“The mother is grieving and needs space and time to do this,” senior ranger of biodiversity Catherine Peters said in the statement. “The Bay of Islands is a busy place in summer with a lot of activity in and around the water. This female needs everyone on the water to give her the extra space and respect she needs whilst she copes with her loss.”

The calf was likely stillborn. At times, the mother has been spotted dropping the calf, then leaving the rest of her group to go back and retrieve it.

The department also included a comprehensive set of guidelines for how people in boats should behave around dolphins.

The situation is reminiscent of Tahlequah, a mother orca whale off the coast of British Columbia who carried her dead newborn calf with her for days, balancing the calf and preventing it from sinking into the water. Tahlequah ultimately released the calf after carrying it for more than two weeks.