Click to Translate to English Click to Translate to French  Click to Translate to Spanish  Click to Translate to German  Click to Translate to Italian  Click to Translate to Japanese  Click to Translate to Chinese Simplified  Click to Translate to Korean  Click to Translate to Arabic  Click to Translate to Russian  Click to Translate to Portuguese  Click to Translate to Myanmar (Burmese)

PANDEMIC ALERT LEVEL
123456
Forum Home Forum Home > Main Forums > Latest News
  New Posts New Posts RSS Feed - 600+ Dolphins Dead  (Peru)  ???
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Events   Register Register  Login Login

Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk

600+ Dolphins Dead (Peru) ???

 Post Reply Post Reply
Author
Message
Mahshadin View Drop Down
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: January 26 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 3882
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: 600+ Dolphins Dead (Peru) ???
    Posted: March 30 2012 at 4:11pm
Over 600 Dolphins Have Mysteriously Washed Up On The North Coast Of Peru
 
Event Description

Biological Hazard in Peru on Friday, 30 March, 2012 at 03:13 (03:13 AM) UTC.
Description
Hardy Jones, co-founder of BlueVoice.org is reporting that over 600 dolphins have mysteriously washed up on the north coast of Peru. Details are still surfacing over a shocking and unexplained mortality event (UME), which has claimed the lives of hundreds of dolphins along the Peruvian coastline. Jones who is currently in Chiclayo investigating the deaths, said he arrived in the country on Tuesday in response to an email alert from Dr. Carlos Yaipen Llanos, the Lima-based director of the marine mammal rescue organization, ORCA Peru. Yaipen's email informed Jones that as many as one thousand dolphins had possibly stranded themselves on the Peruvian coastline. "Lest there be any doubt," Jones said in a statement today at The Voice of the Dolphins, "stranded means dead in virtually all cases." Jones was already on high alert after rumors described a similar event in the same area last month, when media reports claimed 264 bottlenose dolphin had died on a 66-mile stretch of coastline 500 miles north of Lima. At the time of the event, the dolphin deaths were attributed to contaminated anchovies, or the impact of off-shore oil exploration and drilling in the region.

Yet, said Jones, "after some authorities dismissed the report. I backed off the story." But Yaipen's email announcement disturbed the BlueVoice co-founder: "If the numbers were even close to accurate this would be perhaps the greatest dolphin mortality event ever recorded. I called Dr. Yaipen. He had a man on the ground north of Chiclayo who confirmed large numbers of dolphins stranded along 200 kilometers of the coast." Jones flew to Peru on Tuesday determined he said, to find evidence of the 1,000 dolphins. "We were told the greatest concentration was three hours drive north," Jones added, but only a few hundred yards into their trip, the crew began to spot dead dolphins. Sporadic sightings at first revealed dolphins either in various stages of decomposition, or freshly stranded. "All were dead," Jones said, including, "a new born common dolphin, umbilicus still attached." Yaipen, he added, conducted necropsies on several of the dolphins, and took samples for laboratory testing.

Jones, Yaipen and his assistants, continued to count dolphins until the rising tide forced them of the beach. Jones reported the devastating final tally via Facebook: "To date we have found 615 dead dolphins on 135 kilometers of beach N of San Jose, Peru. This tragedy is unspeakable. BlueVoice is working with Dr. Carlos Yaipen Llanos of ORCA Peru. Tissue samples have been obtained and will be analyzed. Never heard of this level of UME. This must be investigated." BlueVoice board of directors member, Jeff Friedman, told Digital Journal that Jones has confirmed the "primary species [...] found, was long-beaked common dolphin." Jones and Yaipen are currently in a Lima lab testing samples taken from the dead dolphins. Long-beaked common dolphins are usually found in groups averaging from 100-500 animals, but have been occasionally seen in larger herds of thousands of individuals. BlueVoice.org hopes to release video, images and further information shortly, said Friedman.
 
 
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."   G Orwell
Back to Top
jdljr1 View Drop Down
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar

Joined: June 05 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 1621
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote jdljr1 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 08 2012 at 3:23am
     Update on this issue first noted in March, the situation is worsening.
 
Dead Dolphins and Birds Are Causing Alarm in Peru
< =http://graphics8.nytimes.com/s/2012/05/08/world/Peru/Peru-articleLarge.jpg itemprop="identifier"> < =600 itemprop="height"> < =400 itemprop="width">
Mariana Bazo/Reuters

A cormorant found Sunday on a beach south of Lima. Officials say seabirds may be starving, and dolphins may have a virus.

By DAVID JOLLY and ANDREA ZARATE
Published: May 7, 2012
  • LIMA,Peru — Late last year, fishermen began finding dead dolphins, hundreds of them, washed up on Peru’s northern coast. Now, seabirds have begun dying, too, and the government has yet to conclusively pinpoint a cause.
World%20Twitter%20Logo.

Connect With Us on Twitter

Follow @nytimesworld for international breaking news and headlines.

Twitter List: Reporters and Editors

Officials insist that the two die-offs are unrelated. The dolphins are succumbing to a virus, they suggest, and the seabirds are dying of starvation because anchovies are in short supply.

But even three months after officials began testing the dolphins, the government has not released definitive results, and there is growing suspicion among the public and scientists that there might be more to the story. Some argue that offshore oil exploration could be disturbing wildlife, for example, and others fear that biotoxins or pesticides might be working their way up the food chain.

At least 877 dolphins and more than 1,500 birds, most of them brown pelicans and boobies, have died since the government began tracking the deaths in February, the Environment Ministry said last week. The dolphins, many of which appeared to have decomposed in the ocean before washing ashore, were found in the Piura and Lambayeque regions, not far from the border with Ecuador.

The seabirds, which seem mostly to have died onshore, have been found from Lambayeque to Lima. “Never in my 40 years as a fisherman have I seen anything like this,” said Francisco Ñiquen Rentería, the president of the Association of Artisanal Fishermen in Puerto Eten, in the Lambayeque region. “Sometimes in the past, you’d randomly see a dead dolphin or a pelican, but this, what’s happening now, is really alarming.”

“It is odd indeed,” Gabriel Quijandría, the deputy environment minister, acknowledged in an e-mail. “But they are not related.”

The federal Ocean Institute has said that the most likely culprit in the dolphin deaths is the morbillivirus, from a family of viruses linked to previous mass deaths of marine mammals, Mr. Quijandría said, though officials in recent days have sounded less certain.

For the seabirds, he wrote, the “most plausible hypothesis so far” from the National Agricultural Health Service is that they are dying from a lack of food, mainly anchoveta (Engraulis ringens), a Peruvian anchovy, as a result of the sudden heating of coastal waters.

The Environment Ministry said the dolphin deaths had no link to fisheries, red tides or other biotoxins, bacteria, heavy metals or pesticides. It said it had also ruled out any connection to offshore seismic testing by companies to locate oil and gas deposits under the seabed.

Still, fishermen, environmentalists and others suspect that government officials are not being completely candid.

The discovery of dead animals on beaches near Lima, the capital, in recent days has complicated matters. Over the weekend, the Health Ministry issued an alert advising people to avoid the waters around Lima and to the north, “until we know the cause of the recent deaths of marine species.”

It advised people not to eat raw seafood, an ingredient of the national favorite ceviche, and recommended that people disposing of dead marine animals wear gloves and masks. The warning sowed confusion, given earlier government statements indicating that the seabirds were probably starving rather than falling ill from some disease.

The Peruvian coast, nourished by the cold Humboldt Current, is one of the richest marine habitats on earth. Flowing north from Antarctic waters, the current lifts nutrients from the ocean depths into zones nearer the surface.

So plentiful are the plankton in these waters that the area has the world’s largest fishery, focused on the anchoveta. The fish is an important component of the diets of the dolphins, seabirds and other predators.

The Environment Ministry says that data from the South American institute for the study of the effect of El Niño show that coastal water temperatures have been above average in recent months. The anchoveta prefer the colder water, and if they descend below a depth of six or seven feet the pelicans cannot reach them.

That explanation doesn’t satisfy Juan Sernaque Juárez, 34, a fisherman from the northern town of Tumbes, who attributes the die-offs to seismic testing by oil and gas companies. He said that he and some of his neighbors had gone on strike a few months ago to protest the testing, which they believe was killing dolphins, birds and sea lions. “But it didn’t work,” he said, “and now we’re the ones mostly suffering the results."

In offshore seismic testing, ships tow arrays of air guns that release high-pressure air under water, producing sound waves that can be analyzed to locate oil and gas deposits deep under the ocean floor.

But Mr. Quijandría, the deputy environment minister, said that the dolphins had not shown signs of damage to internal organs, ear structures or bones that would be consistent with injuries from underwater explosions.

One of the exploration companies, BPZ Energy, released a statement saying its operations were far north of the area where the dolphins had washed up and that the die-offs began before it began its recent surveys.

Mr. Ñiquen Rentería, 57, from Puerto Eten, who fishes for small sharks and flatfish, contends that the government is underestimating the extent of the dolphin deaths. He said by telephone that he had seen at least 3,000 dead dolphins on the beach since November and that they were still dying, although no longer in such large numbers.

But Mr. Quijandría said there was no evidence that that many dolphins had died.

The Peruvian news media have raised the possibility that pesticides could be poisoning the animals. Pedro Alva, president of the Regional Development Institute of the Lambayeque region, suggested that raw sewage or another effluent could be the culprit.

“It’s unbearable to walk around those areas,” Mr. Alva said of the rapidly growing towns along the coast. “They dump both their industrial and residential wastes into the ocean without control, without consideration.”

Sophie Bertrand, a marine ecologist at the Research Institute for Development in France who is leading a research project on seabirds and sea lions in Peru, said that if there was a common factor linking the die-offs, it would probably be found in the anchoveta, eaten by all of the species concerned.

Even though Peruvian investigators appear to have excluded biotoxins as a possible agent, she wrote in an e-mail, “there are many and it may be difficult to test for all of them.”

David Jolly reported from Paris, and Andrea Zarate from Lima, Peru.

 
John L
Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply
  Share Topic   

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down