Los Angeles: “Dead sea lions everywhere”
.
Rescuer: I’ve
never seen anything like this… we never would have imagined the
numbers —
Expert: No oceanographic explanation for what we’re seeing (VIDEO)
Expert: No oceanographic explanation for what we’re seeing (VIDEO)
.
30
March, 2013
CBS
Los Angeles,
March 29, 2013: Starving,
Dying Sea Lions Washing Up On Southland Beaches [...]
“I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Jonsie Ross, one of
the rescuers from the [California Wildlife Center]. “It just looks
like malnutrition to me.” [...] “Even if I think people have been
prepared, we never would have imagined the numbers that are coming up
on the beach,” said Ross. Daniel Russell came from Malibu on Friday
to enjoy a walk on the beach, but the sight of dead sea lions
everywhere was too much for him. “It kind of ruined our walk around
the corner actually. We were going to explore and then I went to take
a picture and then there’s two dead lions I almost stepped on,”
he told CBS 2. [...] And biologists say it is so bad on the beaches
that rescuers have had to leave the worst of the pups behind while
saving the strongest ones […]
AP,
March 29, 2013: [...] It’s gotten so bad in the past two weeks that
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declared an
“unusual mortality event.” That will allow more scientists to
join the search for the cause, [Sharon Melin, a wildlife biologist
for the National Marine Fisheries Service based in Seattle] said.
[...] Routine testing of seafood is being done by state and federal
agencies and consumer safety experts are working with NOAA to find
the problem. “No link has been established at this time between
these sea lion strandings and any potential seafood safety issues,”
NOAA said in a statement. [...] rescuers have had to leave the worst
of them in an effort to save the strongest ones, she said. […]
“We
anticipate this will get worse when the pups begin to wean from their
mothers and have to forage on their own . It’s going to be a bad
year or two for sea lions [...] There really isn’t an oceanographic
explanation for what we’re seeing. We’re looking at disease as a
possibility and also at the food supply, and it could be some
combination.”-Sharon
Melin, wildlife biologist with the National Marine Fisheries Service,
which is part of NOAA
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