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| 'It's day after day after day' ... two stranded common dolphins being rescued at Herring River in Wellfleet, Cape Cod. Photograph: Julia Cumes/AP |
Scientists
in Cape Cod are trying to determine what is causing dolphins to swim
dangerously close to shore, with more than 100 becoming stranded in the last
three weeks.
Members of
Congress are due to be briefed on Friday about the strandings, the worst such
event in more than a decade. Volunteers are maintaining coastal vigils and
trying to get the animals back to sea.
"What
is different about this particular event is that instead of having one discrete
event, it is this string of ongoing strandings that started on 12 January and
is just continuing," said Katie Moore, who manages marine mammal rescue
operations for the International Fund for Animal Welfare. "It's day after
day after day."
Moore is
due to brief members of Congress on the strandings, which have been
concentrated along a 25-mile stretch of coast that runs between the towns of
Dennis and Wellfleet in Massachusetts.
It's not
unheard of for dolphins to swim too close to shore, said Teri Rowles, who heads
the marine mammals division of NOAA, the government agency that monitors
oceans. "The Cape Cod area is a hot spot for mass strandings," she
said.
But it's
rare for such events to be confined to a single species – the common dolphin,
in this case – and it was the worst such stranding since 1998.
Of the 111 that have come ashore, 81 were found dead, or died soon after they were
stranded. Rescue workers, trundling along through the muck with specially
adjusted stretchers, have eventually been able to return 30 surviving dolphins
to the sea, Moore said.
But they
remain baffled as to what caused the animals to swim so dangerously close to
shore. Theories include the dolphins being lost, confused by changing tides or
potentially diseased.
"In
the ones we are finding alive, we are not seeing any consistent diseases or
anything indicating a pattern as to why they might be stranding," said
Moore. The dolphins were male and female, young and fullgrown. Most appeared
healthy, although lab tests are still being processed.
There have
been no severe winter storms: as in much of the north-east, the weather has
been unusually warm for this time of year.
But Rowles
suggested the animals could have become confused by changes in water
temperature or tides that led them into Cape Cod Bay, or by the irregular features
of the coastline.
There is
also the possibility the dolphins could have been victims of their own natural
sociability, simply following one another to their doom.
"These
are very intelligent animals with very large brains, but there is something about
the way they bond to one another," Moore said.
Those
strong bonds serve the dolphins well in the wild. When they get into trouble,
the dolphins stick together. But Moore added that social cohesion could
sometimes be deadly. "That bond becomes a liability when they get into
shallow water, and that may be why they mass strand."
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