Environment Magazine

Seven Dead Dolphins Found on Maryland Shores in ‘Alarming’ Mid-Atlantic Trend

Posted on the 06 August 2013 by Earth First! Newswire @efjournal
  By Scott Dance / The Baltimore Sun

Seven bottlenose dolphins have washed up dead on Maryland shores in recent weeks, part of a larger mystery along the Mid-Atlantic coast, where alarmed scientists are working to find the cause of more than 120 dolphin deaths since June.

The seven dolphin carcasses were found in the Chesapeake Bay and on beaches on Maryland’s Atlantic coast during July.

In a typical July, marine biologists might respond to a single report of a dead dolphin, said Dr. Cindy Driscoll, veterinarian and fish and wildlife health program director for the state Department of Natural Resources.

Several of the carcasses were “very decomposed” by the time they were found, Driscoll said, making it difficult to determine their cause of death. But state officials have sent several tissue samples to labs in the hope of gaining more information.

Scientists believe that toxic algae blooms or a virus could be to blame.

Dolphin deaths have been reported this summer from New Jersey to Virginia, with the greatest numbers in those two states. The total count troubles scientists, who are waiting on lab results to determine whether it is, indeed, a crisis.

“It is alarming since it’s much higher than normal and in such a short amount of time,” said Jennifer Dittmar, the stranding coordinator for the National Aquarium in Baltimore. “As far as an overall effect it’s having on the population, it’s hard to tell right now.”

In Maryland, Driscoll said, 15 dead dolphins have washed ashore since the beginning of the year. In a normal year, the tally is more like eight to 10.

In Virginia, 87 dead dolphins have been found since June, most of them clustered along that state’s portion of the Chesapeake. In a normal year, about 50 deaths would be reported there by this time of the year.

In New Jersey, 21 dolphin carcasses have washed up this summer, compared with about a dozen in a normal year.

Bottlenose dolphins live in pods and can be found along the East Coast from New Jersey to Florida. The mammals spend the winter in the temperate waters off the Southern states, then come north to the bays, sounds and open waters off the Mid-Atlantic coast from May to October.

In Maryland, Dittmar said, pods of as many as 20 to 30 dolphins follow schools of fish as far up the Chesapeake Bay as the Choptank River. Her job is to rescue stranded dolphins, but she said none have been found alive this year.

Necropsies — the veterinary equivalent of autopsies — are being performed on the animals that have been found. Officials say it could take several months to determine causes of death — or whether and how they might be linked.

Early findings indicate a sickness, said Susan Barco, research coordinator at the Virginia Aquarium and Marine Science Center Foundation.

“This is really frightening because these animals are sentinels of ocean health,” she said. “Strandings have been much more common in the past few decades, and we think it’s an indication of the health of our ecosystem.”

Suspected causes include pneumonia, E. coli infection and morbillivirus, which was responsible for mass dolphin deaths in the 1980s, said Matthew Huelsenbeck, a marine scientist with the conservation group Oceana.

Environmental factors such as the accumulation of heavy metals or exposure to biotoxins through food make dolphins “some of the most toxic animals on the planet” — and more vulnerable to diseases, Huelsenbeck said.

In other cases involving mass deaths of large marine mammals, causes have included biotoxins from algae, other suspected environmental factors, or changes in the food chain.

Manatees are dying in record numbers in Florida this year — nearly 700 through late July, according to a state tally — in a case linked to a red tide of toxic algae.

Red tides have also killed sea lions in large numbers on the U.S. Pacific Coast in recent years. In some cases, Huelsenbeck said, young sea lions have died of starvation because they weren’t able to adapt quickly enough when their food supply moved elsewhere.

Copyright © 2013, The Baltimore Sun


Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog