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talk / talk.environment / Outbreak of neurotoxin killing unprecedented number of sea lions along California coast

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Subject: Outbreak of neurotoxin killing unprecedented number of sea lions along California coast
From: useapen
Newsgroups: alt.los-angeles, sci.environment.waste, talk.environment, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, sac.politics
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Date: Sat, 7 Sep 2024 07:16 UTC
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From: yourdime@outlook.com (useapen)
Newsgroups: alt.los-angeles,sci.environment.waste,talk.environment,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,talk.politics.guns,sac.politics
Subject: Outbreak of neurotoxin killing unprecedented number of sea lions along California coast
Date: Sat, 7 Sep 2024 07:16:25 -0000 (UTC)
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MORRO BAY, Calif. � By the time the rescue squad got to her, a small
crowd had formed around the agitated California sea lion. As the team
crept toward her � carrying large wooden shields and a giant net � the
animal�s head weaved, craned and rocked back and forth in frenzied
rhythms.

Lucille � as she was later named by the Marine Mammal Center�s Morro Bay
field office � had barely registered her captors� approach as the team of
five animal rescue volunteers pounced on her. A small struggle ensued as
the creature�s body went rigid with seizures, but the team managed
eventually to push her into an XXL portable dog crate.

�It�s really hard when they�re not acting like sea lions,� said Jake Roth,
a 22-year-old volunteer who helped with the rescue.

It was the first of dozens of frantic rescue phone calls made by horrified
beachgoers that day, as an acute domoic acid outbreak continued to wreak
havoc along the San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara coasts this summer.

�The levels we�re finding inside these animals is off the charts,� said
Giancarlo Rulli, a spokesman for the Sausalito-based Marine Mammal Center.
�It�s all hands on deck.�

Domoic acid is a neurotoxin released by Pseudo-nitzschia, a common
phytoplankton species found in coastal waters. Sea lions � and other
marine mammals � become poisoned when they eat large amounts of fish or
invertebrates that have been chowing on the contaminated diatoms.

Symptoms include lethargy, vomiting, unusual behavior, seizures, loss of
pregnancy and death.

Domoic acid, which is an amino acid, is not always produced by the
phytoplankton. It is only manufactured under certain conditions � ones
which scientists are still trying to determine. But upwelling of seawater
seems to be a common factor � and strong upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich
water is currently hugging the Central California coastline.

The outbreak has been at crisis levels since late July.

�One of the things that has come out again and again in a lot of our
studies... is that, yes, when you get upwelling � which is typified by
colder water temperatures and lots of nutrients � you will stimulate a
bloom of diatoms,� said Clarissa Anderson, director of Southern California
Coastal Ocean Observing System and the Cooperative Institute for Marine,
Earth, and Atmospheric Systems, which are operated out of UC San Diego�s
Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

�But then the bigger question � the one we�ve not been able to totally
wrap our heads around � is, when does it produce the toxin? What is the
mixture of conditions that requires that? Because this organism is around
all the time,� she said.

Domoic acid outbreaks are not new. They have been happening for decades,
if not millennia. And although it wasn�t identified in California waters
until 1991, it is believed to have been behind outbreaks before that �
including the 1961 �invasion� of chaotic sea birds in Capitola that partly
inspired Alfred Hitchcock�s 1963 film, �The Birds.�

What has changed, said Anderson, are the frequency, timing and location of
the events.

�We know that upwelling season in California has always been a great time
to expect a Pseudo-nitzschia bloom and potentially a domoic acid event,
and that can start as early as March,� she said. As a result, scientists
had associated springtime with domoic acid outbreaks.

�But now we�re starting to see something different: These past three
summers there have been these intense, long, lasting blooms,� she said.

And while Monterey and Humboldt Bay had been considered the classical hot
spots, it�s Southern California that has been clobbered since 2022.

She said climate change is likely playing a role in these changes � but
not necessarily because of warm water temperatures.

�One of the things we have seen in our years and years and years of data
is that it�s the mixture of nutrients that come with upwelling that is
potentially responsible for turning the toxin on or off,� she said. �And
that mixture of nutrients may be impacted by global climate change,
because climate change is changing ocean circulation physics at the basin
scale � like the Pacific Ocean scale � and that can have ramification on
what kinds of water � the flavor of water � that is upwelling onto the
coast in California.�

Raphe Kudela, a professor of ocean science at UC Santa Cruz, said there
might also be a connection to heat and runoff from inland rivers.

He said in the last few years, really wet winters have contributed to an
increase in river runoff � and a resulting dump of nutrients into
California�s coastal waters.

�So you get a pulse of upwelling, which brought some cool water with even
more nutrients to the surface, and then everything warmed up. That�s just
absolutely perfect conditions for a bloom like this,� he said.

It�s also a perfect recipe for creatures like sardines and anchovies, who
feast on the diatoms, algae and phytoplankton in these cool, nutrient-rich
waters. And those fish bring in predators, such as sea lions, dolphins,
fur seals, birds and other fish that then proceed to feast on these �toxic
bullets.�

Anderson said people will occasionally ask her if they, too, could get
sick from eating anchovies.

�I�m like, are you planning on eating as many anchovy as a sea lion?� she
said, noting that sea lions eat roughly 5% to 8% of their body weight per
day. For a 150-pound person, that would be 7.5 to 12 pounds of anchovy.

And that�s part of the tragedy of this latest outbreak.

Barbie Halaska, a necropsy specialist with the Marine Mammal Center,
showed visitors the milk-rich tissue enveloping the single six-inch
incisions she had made in the chests of six of the dead sea lions that had
died at the Morro Bay center.

All six were adult, lactating females, she said, with thick layers of fat.

�You can see how big she is. She�s gorgeous,� said Halaska, pointing at
the dead but otherwise healthy-looking animal. �They�ve got a great food
supply. It just happens to be tainted. When they�re lactating, and they
find a good food stock, they just go and go and go. Unfortunately, that
means the neurotoxin just bioaccumulates.�

She said female sea lions tend to give birth around June 15 � �we call it
sea lion birthday� � which means these females most likely had a young,
dependent pup with them before they were stranded. Sea lion pups are
dependent on their mothers until they are about 9 months old.

Research shows that pups growing inside contaminated pregnant females
suffer brain damage. Milk from contaminated females also carries the
toxin, suggesting it could be transmitted to pups.

By early afternoon, Lucille and three other sea lions were being treated
for domoic acid poisoning.

Lucille was passed out, snoring on the cement floor of the pen. Soon after
she arrived, a center staff member had delivered a shot full of
phenobarbital and midazolam into her back haunch, to control the seizures.
Staff then hooked her up to an IV bag of fluid to help flush the toxin out
of her body.

But one of the three newer arrivals, a large, adult female named Yippee,
arrived with a broken and dislocated jaw. Staff concluded she�d die if she
was returned to the wild. They made the hard decision to medically
euthanize her.

She struggled to flee from the small team that came in to deliver the
shot, but was finally backed into a corner and succumbed. Her breathing
slowed and within a few minutes, she was still.

Rulli said such episodes are always painful, and the center works hard to
support staff who respond to these events. Repeated encounters with
suffering animals can take a toll.

Roughly 30% of the animals that have come to the center in this latest
outbreak � which began at the end of July � have died, said Aliah Meza,
operation manager of the Morro Bay field office.

Farther south, where staff from the Channel Islands Marine Wildlife
Institute are responding to animals along the Santa Barbara and Ventura
coasts, the number exceeds 50%, said Sam Dover, founder and chief
veterinarian of Channel Islands Marine and Wildlife Institute.

To keep these facilities running and these teams operating, both
institutions rely on donations and some level of state and federal
funding.

State funding was nearly pulled last year when the governor�s office
struck $2 million in funding from the state budget. For smaller
operations, such as Dover�s, that would have been a 50% hit on its
operating budget. The groups were able to convince lawmakers to replace
the funding.

�I don�t envy the sharpened pencil and eraser work that they were doing,�
said Jeffrey Boehm, the marine center�s chief external relations officer,
who said he and others went to Sacramento to make the case that their work
is in the public interest. �Having an entity that is prepared, skilled and
professional to respond to wildlife that might be having a seizure on a
public beach, that�s in the public interest. As is the science we advance
through doing this work... Because at the end of the day, it�s all just
one system.�


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