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Dolphin Deaths On Gulf Coast: Oil Spill Or Cold Water To Blame?

Dead Dolphins

First Posted: 03/04/11 01:05 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

BILOXI, Mississippi (Reuters/Leigh Coleman) - Marine scientists are debating whether 80-plus bottlenose dolphins found dead along the U.S. Gulf Coast since January were more likely to have perished from last year's massive oil spill or a winter cold snap.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declared "an unusual mortality event" last week when the number of dead dolphins washing up in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida had reached nearly 60, about half of them newly born or stillborn calves.

The death toll along 200 miles of shoreline has climbed to at least 82 since then, many times the normal mortality rate for dolphins along the Gulf Coast this time of year.

Although none so far showed outward signs of oil contamination, suspicions immediately turned to petrochemicals that fouled Gulf waters after a BP drilling platform exploded in April 2010, rupturing a wellhead on the sea floor.

Eleven workers were killed in the blast, and an estimated 5 million barrels (206 million gallons) of crude oil spewed into the Gulf over more than three months.

Scientists in the Gulf already were in the midst of investigating last year's discovery of nearly 90 dead dolphins, most of them adults, when officials became alarmed at a surge in dead baby dolphins turning up on beaches in January.

The latest spike in deaths, and a high concentration of premature infants among them, has led some experts to speculate that oil ingested or inhaled by dolphins at the time of the spill has taken a belated toll on the marine mammals, possibly leading to dolphin miscarriages.

The die-off has come at the start of the first dolphin calving season in the northern Gulf since the BP blowout.

But scientists at the independent Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama suggested on Thursday that unusually chilly water temperatures in the Gulf may be a key factor.

"Everyone wants to blame toxicity due to the oil spill, said Monty Graham, a senior scientist at the Dauphin Island lab. "The oil spill ... very well could have been the cause of the dolphin deaths. But the cold weather could have been the last straw for these animals."

He noted that water temperatures abruptly plunged from the upper 50s into the 40s off Dauphin Island in January, just before the first two stillborn calves found there were recovered. He said a second wave of dolphin carcasses washed ashore after temperatures dipped again.

Fellow Dauphin Island scientist Ruth Carmichael called the arrival of the cold snap "incredibly compelling."

"The timing of the cold water may have been important because the dolphins were late in their pregnancies, about one to two months from giving birth. That might render them more vulnerable to temperature shocks," she said.

But NOAA officials discounted the significance of chilly weather, saying a similar cold snap in February 2010, months before the oil spill, was accompanied by higher-than-normal mortality among a range of wildlife, including fish and sea turtles. They also cited research showing bottlenose dolphins tend to swim away from extremely cool waters.

"These animals have the ability to move away from cold. They don't stay around in cold water," said Moby Solangi, director of the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies in Gulfport, Mississippi.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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BILOXI, Mississippi (Reuters/Leigh Coleman) - Marine scientists are debating whether 80-plus bottlenose dolphins found dead along the U.S. Gulf Coast since January were more likely to have perished ...
BILOXI, Mississippi (Reuters/Leigh Coleman) - Marine scientists are debating whether 80-plus bottlenose dolphins found dead along the U.S. Gulf Coast since January were more likely to have perished ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mowprincess
I must be cheerful and obedient...
08:12 PM on 03/31/2011
Of course it is cold water.. give me a break... God Forbid that we actually accept responsibllity for driving our gas guzzling SUVs... I am constantly shocked at the depths some people will go to deny culpability.. This is a tragedy that will be played out for decades... Look at Alaska...
11:22 AM on 03/31/2011
that looks like benzene poisoning to me.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MiamiMama
05:15 AM on 03/09/2011
You are right about China and Viet Nam seafood. I will never eat it. I heard these were offspring and those moms were pregnant when the oil spill took place. The toxicity of the water at that time could have played a key role. I know these mammals do beach themselves and die every year. THE USF scientists are from University of South Florida in Tampa. They have been monitoring and studying conditions in the Gulf after the spill and now. As for the press, I have read some things here and there, but the economy and other matters dominate the news every night. This is a situation that will play itself out for years to come. All points well taken but I still want some long term studies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Derek Spisak
03:07 AM on 03/08/2011
It gets cold every year for a few weeks at a stretch along the upper Gulf Coast, nothing new... never has this mortality rate been recorded at such a high rate.

When is Huffington Post going to give equal time to the laughable "science behind debunking global warming"?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:31 AM on 03/08/2011
What are you complaining about?

HuffPo gives equal time to fossil fuel industry advocates.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
05:57 PM on 03/08/2011
Actually, quite similar events have occurred even within the relatively recent pre-spill past. See 2007, where the deaths were greatest on the Texas coast but occurred all around to the Atlantic side of Florida. If you live in the area, you would know that this past winter was quite a bit colder than normal there.

This is not to say that cold water temps were the cause. They may have been. Or some infectious disease may have been, given that dolphins are social animals living in loose groups roughly the size of human tribes back in the hunter-gatherer days. Or it may turn out that the oil spill was indeed the key factor. Waiting for actual evidence from the marine scientists seems to be the logical thing to do, rather than jumping to conclusions as many here seem inclined to do.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
10:17 PM on 03/08/2011
It's been nine months. Or is it longer. Why, yes it is. It's nearly a year now.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
01:31 AM on 03/09/2011
Oh, and here is a new link from Huffpost about the aerosol petrochemical mix many of us commented about early on during the oil blow out. It rained down as far as northern Alabama (that we know) and possibly as far as the midwest. Don't look for this in the article; it ain't there. But you look it up in older posts of mine and others. Here is what is in the article : http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jerry-cope/nasa-data-toxic-rain_b_830481.html

Do you consider Jerry Cope's work serious and accurate and believe him to be an dedicated chronicler of the Gulf catastrophe? Or do you dismiss him as well?

BTW, part of the Louisiana Bucket Brigade's funding came from Patagonia clothing. See the link here: http://www.patagonia.com/us/patagonia.go?assetid=54730

I believe many are now waking up to this unfolding crisis and we may see actual awareness on a larger scale than we have to date. One can always hope.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JPETERB
11:11 PM on 03/07/2011
Bob smoked cigarettes, pack and a half a day, since he was 12, worked in an asbestos cement pipe plant for 15 years after high school. Worked in a PVC plant for another 20 years. Bob was diagnosed with lung cancer, heart disease and emphysema at 55. But it was pneumonia that actually killed him at 57. So we can just put "natural causes' as the cause of death on the official death certificate. That is prime benefit of the private/public partnership in industrial hygiene, science and public health policy, in the "big picture" everybody important wins. Except, maybe Bob and his family.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
06:54 PM on 03/08/2011
Since neither lung cancer, heart disease, nor emphysema cause pneumonia per se, what is your point? Pneumonia, as opposed to being shot or stabbed or poisoned or run over by a truck, is in fact a "natural cause" of death. And I'm sure you're aware that many millions of people have died of it who have never smoked, worked with asbestos or PVC, or in any other way engaged in especially hazardous behavior. Your analogical sense needs some tuning.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
10:20 PM on 03/08/2011
Yes, and pseudo intellectual Whitebeach is here to say it is impossible to make that connection since we don't know. Where is the Huffpost moderators who allow WB to continue his vitriolic and personal attacks on other posters. Usually, they are quick to remove remarks that are incendiary in nature, but I notice on the BP link stories, they don't. Shame.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
07:36 PM on 03/09/2011
You've got to be kidding, dude. What is it in my post that is so "incendiary in nature" to you? The remark that jpeterb's "analogical sense needs some tuning"? Wow, that's pretty fiery, all right. Thank goodness I didn't get completely carried away and say something atrocious like "I think you're mistaken."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nevernot
I like paying taxes, they buy me civilization.
04:20 PM on 03/07/2011
I'm sure it had nothing to do with the millions of gallons of Corexit dumped in to the waters. If the people on shore were having issues imagine the effect of swimming through that toxic mix of chemicals.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
personal beliefs
Things never go according to plan, so plan accordi
09:59 AM on 03/07/2011
Why do the liberals want it to be due to the oil spill? I've never seen so many people frothing at the mouth to end big oil. Pathetic really.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JPETERB
11:21 PM on 03/07/2011
All honest people want to know are the actual facts. We can take it from there. It is a fact that we were, and still are, not hearing the honest facts from BP about last spring's PB Gulf blowout disaster. Nor can we believe that the co-opted agencies (that should only exist to protect the public's health) are telling the public the truth about the short or long term ill effects of that same disaster.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
10:38 PM on 03/08/2011
Great suggestion. Let's end Big Oil. Would be a grand day, wouldn't it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Didderbops
09:50 AM on 03/07/2011
Here come the oil industry's and the government's highly paid "scientists" to muck up the waters a bit and cast doubt. Can't be the oil that killed em! No way! The Obama administration said these waters are perfectly safe, and all that oil just went away! Look, who's that over there, Charlie Sheen?
07:26 PM on 03/06/2011
Wasn't it also a cold winter in the Gulf last year? What was the difference in water temps between this year & recent years?
06:18 PM on 03/06/2011
Cold snap? Gimme a break...
04:19 AM on 03/07/2011
They'll be sending tissue samples off for testing by USGS. The question is.... will we hear the results.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
09:56 PM on 03/07/2011
Tissue samples will never show anything on animals who were reliant on their mother's body for nutrition. Now finding and sampling the mother would be a great resource, but as you notice, mothers are not washing ashore: fetal dolphins are. So it will be easy to say, well, we just don't know, because there is no way to empirically know. So we have to remain neutral about these corpses' cause of premature death.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gebby
artist gebhardtart advocate for a better world
06:00 PM on 03/06/2011
The answer is obvious isnt it? Solar power anyone?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
10:39 AM on 03/07/2011
#88 ~ Yes please, ASAP. Clean Green Energy Independence now! ☮

How a Solar-Hydrogen Economy Could Supply the World's Energy Needs
http://www.physorg.com/news170326193.html

Solar City Produces 4X the Energy it Consumes
http://inhabitat.com/sonnenschiff-solar-city-produces-4x-the-energy-it-needs/
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
10:45 PM on 03/07/2011
http://win dspireener gy.com/abo ut/mariah- power/
02:55 PM on 03/06/2011
There is little doubt that the oil spill continues to have real and lasting impacts on animals in the Gulf.
There is also little doubt that adverse weather continues to have real and lasting impacts on animals in the gulf and everywhere else.
Little (nothing in my opinion) in ecology is black and white, so to blame this on one or the other probably is inaccurate. Everything is connected, everything effects everything else.

I look forward to where this story goes...even if it turns out to be mostly attributable to weather, it will in no way diminish the continued impact of the spill.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
frappe
Obstruct the obstructionists - Vote Democratic!
10:08 AM on 03/06/2011
Answer: Oil spill.

I'm not a scientist or an expert on environmental matters, but what has and is going on within our ecological system seems abundantly clear to me and anyone else who can see and think clearly.

Dolphins can swim to warmer water but once infected or poisoned by the remnants of the Gulf's oil spill, there was apparently nothing that they could do. This is another clear instance of mankind having a negative impact upon his environment.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sister Bluebird
10:20 AM on 03/06/2011
Sometimes dolphins could swim away. Other times they, like other sealife were trapped between shore lines and the poison. --That being said--thanks for speaking out.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
08:09 PM on 03/06/2011
Some dolphins and porpoises range very close to shore, others a bit farther offshore, and others in the deeper (and at this time of year, warmer) waters much farther out. In short, it's not as simple as you think. If for every dolphin that swam anywhere there were "remnants of the Gulf's oil spill," there was "nothing they could do" except get sick and die, then most or all of the northern Gulf's dolphins and porpoises would be dead and in fact would have died months ago. This, to make an understatement, is not the case.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
02:40 AM on 03/07/2011
New idea surfaced today: water might be too warm. http://www.sunherald.com/2011/03/05/2918278/dolphin-mystery-just-one-piece.html

Here's a weather map showing the Gulf to be normal in temperatures. So how is it that normal is too cold. Whitebeach, go back to sleep.
09:06 AM on 03/08/2011
I am piling it on to "snowballinhell'. I now have 40 photos of the 'devastatingly' white beach
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MiamiMama
10:58 PM on 03/05/2011
It just took a while for the toxins in the water to poison the mother's offspring so once they were born they probably did not have the immune system necessary to survive. I am afraid to eat fish from the Gulf because God knows what has happened in there since the oil spill. They certainly will not tell us the truth about the safety of fish and crabs because you would have to do an autopsy right before you put it on the grill!!!
07:17 AM on 03/08/2011
If you believe that the fisherman and the government are attempting to sell you a contaminated product, maybe you should stop eating anything.

Think about it for second. Everything we eat has the potential for contamination of some sort. So the whole country should be constantly battling food poisoning. Which it is not because producers and government monitor the quality to avoid such a situation.

Please believe your lying eyes and test the fish. You may help Americans get back to work.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MiamiMama
07:23 AM on 03/08/2011
Why did those Dolphins die? That concerns me. The oil does not worry me as much as the chemicals that were used to dilute the oil. USF professors have been testing the water and the results have been pretty bad. They don't get a lot of press regarding the findings of their results. No one wants to accept the blame or responsibility. It will be a while before I eat that stuff.
05:05 PM on 03/05/2011
BREAKING NEWS

A friend just uploaded several just shot photographs of Pensacola Beach.

It is with great sadness that I am forced to report that not one tar-ball of any origin can be seen.

But then this is just anecdotal evidence. You know? Lying eyes.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
02:45 AM on 03/07/2011
Here's some pics posted the day before yesterday. One day the end to oil well blow out doesn't make: http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/shocking-photos-today-pensacola-beach-1000s-dead-animals-photos You can clearly see the oily water coming ashore. But you're a little late with the news of 'all clear'
04:57 AM on 03/07/2011
1) Ambulance chasing lawyer blog site
2) one dead cormorant.
3) thousands (I can see hundreds) of dead jellyfish.
4) a brown stain seen almost daily as associated with seaweed.
5) FAIL!