Beached grave for dead whale: Nobbys beach. Credit:Port Macquarie News It struggled throughout the night to return to sea before dying and washing up close to shore at Nobbys Beach on Monday morning. It was buried late on Monday night. Council says it had no other option Port Macquarie-Hastings Council made the decision to bury the carcass in consultation with the National Parks and Wildlife Service and ORCCA. The council said the decision was considered a last resort.

It said the whale was caught among rocks and was not able to be moved. Marine Rescue deemed the prevailing and forecast winds made conditions too dangerous and further attempts were abandoned. Port Macquarie-Hastings Council says the decision to bury the carcass was a last resort. Credit:Port Macquarie News Getting an excavator down on to the beach was in itself a risky operation because of the terrain, and the fact that Nobbys Beach is inaccessible to vehicles, council added. The whale began to break up when moved. The humpback whale had struggled to return to sea before dying and washing up to shore. Credit:Port Macquarie News

"Council acknowledges concerns being voiced today around public safety and I want to assure our community that the decision to bury the whale was not taken lightly," council director Matt Rogers said. "Having assessed all other options to dispose of the carcass with National Parks and Wildlife Service staff, an excavator was manouevred onto the beach [and] a hole was dug into clay material at the back of the beach. The carcass was buried with two metres of clay and sand cover." Onlookers looking on at the scene of the beached whale. Credit:Port Macquarie News Acting mayor Lisa Intemann said the whole situation was regrettable. "I understand the whale died after being caught up in fishing ropes, the effect of which caused its demise," she said.

"Council consulted with all appropriate agencies and has adopted the only reasonable option in the circumstances." What the experts are saying Community comment swayed greatly towards a removal option with many agreeing the carcass could have been cut up and taken away on a truck. The greatest concern from local ocean lovers is the potential for the whale's decomposing carcass, oil and blubber to seep into the ocean, attracting sharks. Rick Anderson from Rick's Dive School said it was "100 per cent" the wrong option.

"It was a cheap shortcut. I base that opinion on a lifetime of being in the water in Port Macquarie," he said. "All of our swimming beaches from Miners Beach to Town Beach naturally sweep to the north, so anything that is on the beaches or in shore of the river flow is going to keep going around and around for months to years." Mr Anderson said that, given the size of the whale, he predicts a couple of hundred barrels of oil and blubber would be produced, which could leach into the ocean. "Big sharks are going to be in Port Macquarie for a while now," he said. "I went down [on Tuesday] morning to Shelly Beach and snorkelled, and came face-to-face with a great white shark.

"If council gets down and digs up the bits and pieces that they've buried and truck it away, then we have a problem for a few months. If they leave it, then we will have a problem for a few years, which is how long it will take for the oils to leach out." Fellow lifelong Port Macquarie resident Wayne Hudson, who has a bachelor of environmental science, agreed with Mr Anderson. "It's not what I would have done. I understand that they have reasons they've buried it, I hope they are valid and good reasons," he said. "I'm trying to be positive as well, but it's one of those funny ones. I'm also worried about the impacts it could have with sharks coming in. "I've read they are attracted [to dead whales], and others saying they aren't, but there's no definitive research from what I've seen.

"I would have been cautious and assumed it would leach out and attract sharks. Being a tourist and a busy beach town, cutting it up and taking it away would have been the best option." Mr Hudson is worried it will have a negative impact on businesses, diving groups, tourism and accommodation. The community has its say A local of more than 30 years, Craig Watson, started a petition to exhume the carcass. It gained 10 pages of signatures in one hour and was presented to council on Tuesday morning. "From a conservation perspective, we have a big debate going on up and down the coast to lessen the risk that protects not only people but the marine life," he said.

"We have buried an 18-tonne whale in the middle of one of the most popular beaches in a regional tourist hub on the Mid North Coast. "It is right next door to Flynns Beach, which is the main tourist beach in Port Macquarie and has a very large contingent of nippers training there day in and day out. "I don't see any option other than to dig it up, cut it up and cart it away. Either that, or we accept unknown changes for years to come." Marine biologist gives her opinion Kristy Kawaguchi is a marine biologist and said that, from a biological perspective, the best solution was to take it offshore.

"However, the rocks and tide made it difficult for them to do that. It was in a very tough location," she said. "I have no input into what they did, but obviously the people involved thought burying it was the best option. "It is certainly possible that the oil will leach out, and water will go through the sand especially if it rains [but] there is no current solid data that says burying a whale will attract more sharks." She said common sense says the carcass would attract predators if it leaks oil. "Sharks use their sense of smell to hunt food, they are scavengers, but again there is no solid data that would back that up at this point," she said.

"Common sense, yes, but data, no. It's a problem we don't encounter here often, so it will be a hot topic, I would imagine." The last incident of a beached whale occurred at Sawtell in June. The whale could not be returned to sea and was euthanased by authorities on the beach. Samples of the animal were collected to be used for scientific research while the carcass was taken away and buried under landfill. Port Macquarie News