A baby whale that died shortly after stranding near East Cape has been identified as a species so rare it has only been seen four times before in New Zealand, and never as a new-born. The gingko-toothed beaked whale was discovered on a beach at Te Kaha on May 18, but such is its rarity — not to mention the difficulty of distinguishing one baby whale from another — it has only now been identified through DNA analysis. Department of Conservation marine adviser Anton van Helden said the gingko-toothed beaked whale was “exceedingly rare” and, given its habit of spending most of its time at great depths, “extremely elusive”.

The species took its name from the male’s distinctive tusked teeth, which were the shape of a gingko leaf. Van Helden said only five, including the baby found at Te Kaha, had ever stranded in New Zealand, and this was the first neonate or new-born. Worldwide, only about 20 had ever been recorded from strandings.

The baby whale was about two metres long but, had it survived, would have grown to about five metres and weighed two to three tonnes. Kaimahi (workers) from Raukūmara Pae Maunga, an ecological restoration project led by Ngāti Porou and Te Whānau-ā-Apanui iwi, were among the first to spot the baby whale. Michaela Insley said she was driving to Te Kaha with a colleague when she saw a commotion and what appeared to be a dolphin on the beach.

As they drew nearer it became clear it was some type of tohorā (whale). They could see it w.