French rescue services and environmental experts were trying to assess the health of a beluga whale that has wandered up the Seine River and are pondering rescue options for a creature more suited to cold Arctic waters.
Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram
After the beluga was spotted on Wednesday, rescue services monitored the animal with drones, but the whale barely moved on Thursday, drifting between two locks on the river, Eure department official Isabelle Dorliat-Pouzet said.
Drone footage showed the whale swimming slowly, its white silhouette just below the waterline and coming up to breathe.
It was unclear why the whale had strayed so far from its natural habitat, dozens of kilometres up a busy waterway and nearly halfway to Paris, past the port of Rouen.
"The challenge now will be to help feed it, and try to accompany it towards the ocean," Lamya Essemlali, the head of environmental group Sea Shepherd France, said.
She said taking the beluga out of the water was out of the question as that would be risky for it.
The all-white belugas normally live in Arctic and sub-Arctic oceans, although they do sometimes stray into more southern waters and river estuaries and can temporarily survive in freshwater.
The local fire department, which is in charge of monitoring the whale, said its first priority was to evaluate its health before considering whether to intervene or not.