January 2026 saw 27 dolphins wash up dead on Cornwall’s beaches. In just eight days, seven dolphins stranded and were recovered for post-mortem examination, with four confirmed to have died as a result of bycatch. Bycatch remains one of the greatest threats to cetaceans worldwide, including in Cornish waters.
James Barnett, veterinary pathologist for the Cornwall Marine Pathology Team, said three animals “were clearly caught in monofilament nets” with fine linear cuts around the beak, head, fins, and tail. A fourth had clean cuts into the tail fluke consistent with other known bycatch cases where cuts have been made to remove a dead dolphin from a net.