A Washington couple recently said yes to an unusual request from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries and has agreed to allow a 40-foot gray whale to decompose on their waterfront property in Port Townshend.

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The couple, Mario Rivera and Stefanie Worang, volunteers for the Port Townshend Marine Science Center, agreed to have the whale towed to the property so scientists could study how the whale decomposed and was recycled back into the ecosystem.

"That's the primary reason we did it," Rivera said in a NOAA press release. "How many opportunities do you get to watch something like this happen right out in front of you?"

NOAA is seeking other landowners to volunteer their properties for the decomposition of other gray whales, which have been washing up in unusually large numbers this year.

Thirty gray whales have been stranded in Washington so far in 2019, according to NOAA.

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Austin Walters died from an overdose in 2021 after taking a Xanax pill laced with fentanyl, his father said. A new law named after Austin and aimed at preventing deaths from fentanyl has resulted in its first convictions in Georgia, prosecutors said. (Family photo)

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