Whale that stranded off Florida is completely new species (and already endangered)

This 38-foot-long (11.5 meters) baleen whale stranded off Florida in 2019. The adult male is now considered part of a completely new, and endangered, species called Rice's whale.
This 38-foot-long (11.5 meters) baleen whale stranded off Florida in 2019. The adult male is now considered part of a completely new, and endangered, species called Rice's whale.
(Image credit: Florida Everglades National Park)

A 38-foot-long (11.5 meters) whale that washed ashore in the Florida Everglades in January 2019 turns out to be a completely new species. And it's already considered endangered, scientists say.

When the corpse of the behemoth washed up along Sandy Key — underweight with a hard piece of plastic in its gut — scientists thought it was a subspecies of the Bryde's (pronounced "broodus") whale, a baleen whale species in the same group that includes humpback and blue whales. That subspecies was named Rice's whale. Now, after genetic analysis of other Rice's whales along with an examination of the skull from the Everglades whale, researchers think that, rather than a subspecies, the Rice's whale is an entirely new species that lives in the Gulf of Mexico. 

Chris Ciaccia
Live Science Contributor

Chris is the technology editor at Seeking Alpha, a crowd-sourced content service for financial markets. Before that, he led the U.S. science and technology desk at the Daily Mail; he was also a technology features reporter at Fox News. In addition to writing for Live Science, Chris has also written for TheStreet and Investopedia. Chris has a bachelor’s degree in finance from Seton Hall University.