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Wellfleet, Cape Cod Dolphin Strandings Remain A Mystery In Massachusetts

Cape Cod Dolphin

First Posted: 02/16/2012 2:37 am Updated: 02/16/2012 11:45 am

WELLFLEET, Mass. (AP) — There's no good spot on Cape Cod for dolphins to beach themselves, but on this cold, gray day a group of 11 has chosen one of the worst.

The remote inlet down Wellfleet's Herring River is a place where the tides recede fast and far, and that's left the animals mired in a grayish-brown mud one local calls "Wellfleet mayonnaise."

Walking is the only way to reach the animals, but it's not easy. Rescuers crunch through cord grass and seashells before hitting a grabby muck that releases a footstep with a sucking pop. One volunteer hits a thigh-deep hole and tumbles forward. Mud covers his face like messy war paint.

It's a scene that's played itself out all winter long, and scientists have no idea why. A year ago, the 11 dolphins that stranded themselves Tuesday would have been a remarkable number. Now they're just added to an ever-growing tally.

In the last month, 177 short-beaked common dolphins have stranded on Cape Cod, and 124 have died. The total is nearly five times the average of 37 common dolphins that have stranded each of the past 12 years.

Workers at the International Fund for Animal Welfare, which has led the rescue efforts, tag and take blood from the stranded animals. Necropsies have been done on dead dolphins and a Congressional briefing was held this month in the push for answers. But researchers can offer only theories such as changes in weather, water temperature or behavior of the dolphins' prey.

Geography may also play a role if the dolphins are getting lost along the Cape's jagged inner coastline in towns like Wellfleet.

Wellfleet in mid-February feels like a place long emptied out after a dimly remembered party. A drive into town takes you past a closed mini-golf course, candy store and drive-in theater. A downtown road rolls past shuttered cottages and motel cabins.

But Wellfleet is a hot spot for the dolphin strandings, in part because of features such as Jeremy Point, a thin peninsula that blocks the way to Cape Cod Bay if the dolphins wander too far into the town's harbor, as they did on Tuesday.

The rescuers make a quick assessment once they reach the animals.

One dolphin is dead, but the other 10 appear healthy, and some bang their tails in the shallows, struggling to move. Rescuers decide the best course is to wait for the incoming tide to free the dolphins so boats can try to herd them out of trouble. The only other alternative is hauling them to a waiting trailer, and open water. But the trailer is nearly a mile away.

Waiting has risks. Dolphins can't survive long on land and there's no guarantee the boats can push the dolphins on to safety.

"Now's where we start crossing our fingers," says the fund's Brian Sharp as he heads for a boat.

Rescuers in orange vests and black waders work in pairs to move the dolphins on slings, bringing them closer together and pointed the right way.

"We'll take advantage of the fact that they're social animals," said Kerry Branon, a fund spokeswoman. "We're hoping if we release them together, they'll stick together and then we'll herd them out around the point."

Not all the dolphins are on board, though. One drifts off to the left, where he could beach again. The manager of the stranding team, Katie Moore, slides over, grabs its dorsal fin, and gives it a push in the right direction.

"You're going the wrong way, buddy," she says.

The inlet continues to fill and the dolphins break into waters that are deeper than the rescuers can follow, but they're in two groups. The IFAW's boat eventually follows one pod and the Wellfleet harbormaster takes another. The noise from the motors pushes the dolphins ahead. So do acoustic pingers, devices that make a sound that annoys the dolphins.

From here, all the shore workers can do is await word from the boats, which will follow the dolphins until dark, if needed. The crew trudges off the beach and gathers later in a parking lot at the Wellfleet marina, where coffee and doughnut holes beckon.

Mike Giblin, muck still on his face, sits in his truck and explains why, at 64, he can't wait to get an early-morning call asking him to volunteer to help the dolphins. The animals are special, says the retired high school teacher. He says the dolphins somehow know the workers are there to help. He's certain.

Moore later smiles at the thought, but dismisses any mystical link with the animals.

"They're wild animals," she says. "This is not comforting for them. They don't want to be touched."

The day's gray cold has soaked through Moore and she's worn out. Help for her team is coming from different places; some workers Tuesday came up from a Virginia aquarium. But she says the pace of the strandings has been exhausting.

"We just don't know when it's going to end anymore," she said. "That wears on people."

But she's been encouraged by IFAW's success so far in getting dolphins back to sea.

"I think that as humans we have such a huge impact on the ocean environment and on these animals in other ways, that this is our opportunity to do the right thing."

As Moore speaks, her eyes flicker out to the harbor, where she can see the harbormaster's boat has led its group of dolphins to sea. But her agency's boat is still out, and she's unsure if those dolphins will make it, or simply beach again.

The dolphins would all eventually reach the bay. But on Tuesday it was too early for answers, and Moore wondered if she would soon be second-guessing her decision to let the tide free the dolphins, rather than her workers.

"Ask me tomorrow how I feel about that," she said.

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WELLFLEET, Mass. (AP) — There's no good spot on Cape Cod for dolphins to beach themselves, but on this cold, gray day a group of 11 has chosen one of the worst. The remote inlet down ...
WELLFLEET, Mass. (AP) — There's no good spot on Cape Cod for dolphins to beach themselves, but on this cold, gray day a group of 11 has chosen one of the worst. The remote inlet down ...
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09:37 PM on 03/19/2012
The reason whales and dolphins mass beach can be summed up in one word: BAROSINUSITIS

Barosinusitis in diving mammals is a pressure related injury in their head sinuses and air sacs induced by rapid and excessive changes in ambient water pressure. Such oscillation in pressure often occur above the epicenter of shallow focused undersea earthquakes and near high intensity sonar and seismic air cannons.

Sinuses and air sacs in the heads of the world's greatest divers serve as acoustic mirrors reflecting sounds in a way that enables echo-navigation and echo-location. Since ruptured air sinuses disrupt the workings of these acoustic mirrors, whales so injured lose their normally excellent sense of direction. Barosinusitis also prevents these animals from diving and feeding themselves.

Sharks sense the whales are in trouble, move up close behind, and wait for the opportunity to snatch any weakened pod member that falls behind.

Trailed by hungry sharks, the highly stressed whales and dolphins huddle together in a tight group and swim downstream with the flow. Lost whales always swim downstream because there is far less resistance when swimming with the flow.

Whales swim blindly onto beaches because land masses that extend out to sea and oppose the flow of the current trap sand, flotsam, and whales with no sense of direction. In other words, the surface currents pick the stranding beach, not the whales.

Read more at: http://deafwhale.com/seaquake_solution/

Capt. David Williams, President
Deafwhale Society, Inc
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RobietheCat
Altruism with someone else's money isn't
03:49 AM on 02/24/2012
New England, I am going to go out on a limb here.

These animals, which have larger craniums than we, and are apparently healthy, are perhaps trying to send a message to one of the oldest parts of the country.

Please pay attention.

When something is way out of the ordinary, that's the time to think out of the box.

We, the US, the world are stressing the environment.

The Navy in particular is conducting below sea tests, which have been upheld by the courts.

No surprise the New Englander Supreme Court Justice Breyer has a nice place out of the USA, in the Bahamas.

Is that LEGAL?
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lindamom
never fry chicken in the nude
07:35 PM on 02/16/2012
OMG - this is too sad for words...
07:24 PM on 02/16/2012
Like the way the researchers are getting the important things done first ; tagging , weighing , standing over the dolphins and discussing gender , species etc . While the struggle and suffocate in the mud ! thought removing them into safe environment while they are still alive would be the priority !
08:28 PM on 02/16/2012
Very good you've noticed that too. This is how it usually goes and nobody tells the public that dolphins die from Stranding Stress Syndrome more often than not. Rescues have developed some sort of thick skin that they do not even register things like that anymore. Apart from measuring, IFAW also does hearing tests, draws blood and tons of other manipulations that also stress these poor animals. It is like measuring hearing on a survivor of a car crash, unheard with humans, but fine with dolphins. And by the way IFAW is among the "good" rescues, as others just euthanize everything that strand like they did with other victims of the Navy activities nobody talks about: minke whale stranded in North Carolina and humpback whale stranded in Florida.
06:00 PM on 02/16/2012
There's so much happening to our planet that we dont know about and that we are ignoring. (I believe our planet is dying because of how humanity has pigged it up). Like the Wellfleet Harbormaster said last night on the news, this could be an indication of something seriously wrong environmentally that we are not aware of yet...I believe that.

I live in RI near the ocean, work in MA. This is not far from me. It's so heartbreaking. When are we going to wake up to the fact that we can't continue to abuse our planet and expect her to keep giving back?
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RobietheCat
Altruism with someone else's money isn't
03:54 AM on 02/24/2012
As George Carlin said, the Earth WILL GET RID OF US, long before IT DIES.

Trust and believe, the Earth has experienced out of control, egotistical and destructive species before us.

Getting rid of them was "small potatoes."

Like a burp.

Listen to the animals, they know more than you know.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris2281
Dust in the wind....
05:57 PM on 02/16/2012
A mystery huh?
We dump sewage into the oceans, industrial wastes, fertilizers, herbicides and insecticides too and the ocean's waters are the warmest in recorded history allowing pathogens to flourish that kill the reef systems and plankton.
Its no mystery, we've used the oceans like a toilet and we're too stupid and myopic to see that dolphins strandings are a message from ole Mom Nature. She's pissed and we may have put humans on her list for extinction.
A little gift from her in the form of a new virus is all it would take.
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lindamom
never fry chicken in the nude
07:36 PM on 02/16/2012
Fanned...
10:02 AM on 02/17/2012
Mother Nature kills dolphins to send us a message. Just send us a mass email or something ok mom.
chuckl4826
OMG Jan.2013 The end of the "PUD"ERROR!
05:48 PM on 02/16/2012
Leave them alone! They are just trying to evolve like man, and in order to do that they have to leave the water, flop along until they lose their tail and grow a couple of legs, then they learn to stand, grow arms and on and on and on......
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RobietheCat
Altruism with someone else's money isn't
04:00 AM on 02/24/2012
I would like to know if this has been occurring for the past 3000 years. The time some of my people have been around, the Sicilians.

I am not aware that this is anything but a recent phenomenon.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spydrworks1067
05:46 PM on 02/16/2012
Cape Cod Bay is like a fish hook and Wellfleet is like a barb on the fish hook. Look at a map. Google Earth is good for this. It seems perhaps a pod takes a wrong turn and gets caught up along the shores thinking they are headed towards the open ocean, which is not that far away if they were able to swim straight through.

Just a thought.
10:27 PM on 02/17/2012
Good guess, I can see that happening...the question is why all of a sudden so many dolphins and pods are veering into this region at all...I have a feeling this warming ocean is starting to dramatically shift ocean currents, which dolphins are known to often follow for an "easy ride". Perhpas the rotation of currents in that area now drags more into the bay, encouraging dolphins into this sad demise...perhaps a barrier of some sort should be put up?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spydrworks1067
04:33 AM on 02/18/2012
Physical barriers, probably not...but sonar barriers might work to deter them away from the mouth of Cape Cod Bay. Perhaps the Navy sonars can be used strategically to aid the dolphins rather than hamper them. However, it is a part of nature. Sometimes it is best to save the ones you can. Learn from the ones you cannot.

From what I remember reading, beachings here have been common for a long time, but the frequency of them may be on the rise. I wonder if it has to do with the rising sea levels. I grew up along the east coast and been on the Pacific side for almost two decades. A friend back east was saying just the other day the sea levels are definitely rising. He can see it. Some places on the planet may see it more due to the lay of the sea floor. The west coast, the land is falling in the sea. Back east, the sea is swallowing the land (cliffs versus flat wetlands respectively). That makes sense to the tilt of the earth. Here I go off in nerd land thinking. lol
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RobietheCat
Altruism with someone else's money isn't
04:02 AM on 02/24/2012
Do us all a favor, and see if you can find some historical evidence that this has occurred previously in Mass.

Thx.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spydrworks1067
05:20 AM on 02/24/2012
It's right in the article...

"In the last month, 177 short-beaked common dolphins have stranded on Cape Cod, and 124 have died. The total is nearly five times the average of 37 common dolphins that have stranded each of the past 12 years."

That is 37 common dolphins each year for a dozen years. Granted, recent strandings have increased in numbers, but there is a history of strandings.
05:34 PM on 02/16/2012
Is 'fence' too hard a word?
04:42 PM on 02/16/2012
I wonder how much the flotsum from Japan can cause these Whales and Dolphins to either beach themselves or die if they are caught beneath the mass of garbage , they could not come up for air. And would maybe drift away after their death and eventually come ashore. All theseevents that are happening is bound to confuse them. With the food supply dwindling and our axis being shifted in the 2004 earthquake , no wonder they are confused...
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lindamom
never fry chicken in the nude
07:38 PM on 02/16/2012
My first thought was the flotsom also even though it should hit the West Coast first. No one really knows where it all will go or is just now...sad thought but honest.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bubbawubba Gump2
03:54 PM on 02/16/2012
these fish ain't so smart after all
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spydrworks1067
04:49 PM on 02/16/2012
Smarter than you. Dolphins are not fish.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris2281
Dust in the wind....
06:00 PM on 02/16/2012
Bubba proves not all of us have evolved at the same pace.
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lindamom
never fry chicken in the nude
07:39 PM on 02/16/2012
Very good and very warranted - fanned!
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RobietheCat
Altruism with someone else's money isn't
04:03 AM on 02/24/2012
They're NOT fish.

They are mammals just like you.

Only probably a whole lot smarter.

Google it.
03:51 PM on 02/16/2012
Have any of these researcher ever stop to discuss the possibility that the cause, or at least one of the causes, if due to magnetic pole shift? While birds fly by both magnetic compassing and geographical markers, they are affected by pole shift. But for birds, as I assume for both dolphins and whales, they need to adjust their geographical (memory) maps to compensate for slight changes.

That is, while their magnetic compass is hardwired, the visual sensory and memory continues to re-map itself to physical changes in the environment. So while the hardwired compassing does change, and the mammals needs to adjust to proximal changes as they occur; in some cases, dolphins aren't able to do so until they encounter new unfamiliar obstacles by chance or accident.

However, I am not suggesting that all beaching is a direct result of this phenomenon. However, I do presume that it is correlated to it.

Magnetic pole shift alters markers at Oregon airport http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/2011/09/21/magnetic-pole-shift-alters-markers-at-oregon-airport/

Seminar on Advanced Plate Tectonics
http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/pwessel/podcasts/

Paleolatitudes of Kerguelen, Louisville and Hawaii hotspots http://www.geodynamics.no/STEINBERGER/research/palat.html
04:04 PM on 02/16/2012
Sorry, I mean to say, Polar Wonder, and not pole shift. That is, the Earths does continues to wonder around year-by-year; where as shifts occur in approximately every 825,000 year cycles, or about 400 times in the last 330 million years, occording to the article from Nation Geographic News.

North Magnetic Pole Is Shifting Rapidly Toward Russia
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/12/1215_051215_north_pole.html
05:37 PM on 02/16/2012
Never ASSume or presume, until the facts are in!
02:53 PM on 02/16/2012
Sonar probably sounds like ......"Get out or the water!!" to a dolphin.
02:39 PM on 02/16/2012
Ask the Navy if they are using sonar in the area, probably YES...Very sad
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RobietheCat
Altruism with someone else's money isn't
04:05 AM on 02/24/2012
Know what is amazing, we as humans think we control the Earth.

In fact since water covers more than two thirds of the Earth, from the dolphin perspective, the humans control very little in the grand scheme of things.
02:22 PM on 02/16/2012
I agree, why not place acoustic pingers to repel the dolphins from comming in. Maybe limit the use of sonar in these areas as well.
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RobietheCat
Altruism with someone else's money isn't
04:08 AM on 02/24/2012
You cannot stop nature, don't you get it?

You cannot treat the ocean as your private toilet, and expect it behave as a mountain spring.