From: Channel 3 News KEYT
Ocean temperature, record birthing season may be to blame for lack of food
Beth Farnsworth, NewsChannel 3 This Morning Anchor & Reporter, beth.farnsworth@keyt.com
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. - Sick and dying sea lions were spotted on at least two local beaches Thursday; one in Santa Barbara, the other in Ventura.
Peter
Howorth, director of the Santa Barbara Marine Mammal Center, invited
NewsChannel 3 along for a rescue Thursday near Sandspit outside the
harbor.
It took
a large net, a bloody knuckle and a lot of patience to nab the scrawny
pup tucked in the rocks at the edge of the breakwater.
"She probably weighs 20 pounds," Howorth estimated." "At nine months, and she is weaned, should weigh 50 pounds or more."
This
was Howorth's 179th sea lion rescue since January; in 2012, Howorth
says he rescued fewer than 200 sea lions the entire year.
Santa
Barbara is a center point in a declared U-M-E -- Unusual Mortality
Event -- designated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, which stretches south to San Diego.
Michelle
Berman with the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History claims wildlife
experts have rescued more than 1,000 sea lions found on beaches in
California since January.
Berman says normally, sea lion rescues range between 200 and 300 a year.
The
associate curator of vertebrate zoology is quick to add that domoic
acid, a naturally occurring toxin, has been detected in some sea lion
necropsies and could play a factor in this unprecedented die off.
Both
Howorth and Berman suspect an increase in the ocean's temperature is
pushing bait fish, like sardines and anchovies, into cooler water
farther offshore, thus diminishing the food supply for sea lions along
the coast. MORE
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