Florida Waters Becoming a Morgue for Marine Mammals?
Deaths
of pilot whales, bottlenose dolphins, manatees a troubling trend
Andrea
Germanos, staff writer
24
January, 2014
"Sentinels
of ocean health" in Florida's waters seem to be delivering a
warning.
The
NOAA Fisheries reports that 25 deceased pilot whales were discovered
Thursday near Kice Island off southwestern Florida.
Eight
other pilot whales died or were humanely euthanized earlier in the
week when they were stranded further north near Lover's Key State
Park.
Contributing
to the stranding situation, the NOAA says, are the close bonds the
whales have. If one is sick, others may stay close by it even at the
risk of getting stranded.
The
NOAA says that the these events coupled with a mass stranding in
December have sparked scientists to closely investigate the
situation.
"This
is unusual and something we're looking into and monitoring,"
Blair Mase, a marine mammal specialist with NOAA, told reporters.
Other
marine mammals in Florida waters have taken a hit recently as well.
In
2013, a record number of manatees died, and dolphins struggled along
the eastern seaboard last year as well, with eight times the
historical average washing up on shores from New Jersey to Florida.
The
NOAA also declared an "unusual mortality event" in the
state's Indian River Lagoon system for bottlenose dolphins in 2013.
The mass deaths prompted the area to be called a "killing zone."
The
marine mammals' deaths may be ushering a warning about the
environment.
"Marine
mammals are very good sentinels for ocean and human health, and they
really act like the proverbial canaries in a coal mine,” the New
York Times quotes Dr. Greg Bossart, a veterinary pathologist and
senior vice president in charge of animal health at the Georgia
Aquarium, as saying. "They give us an idea of what’s occurring
in the environment."
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