MASSACHUSETTS
In this image provided by the International Fund for Animal Welfare, 12 dolphins, which were stranded near Lieutenant Island, are attended to in a mobile dolphin rescue vehicle, Nov. 14, 2024, in Wellfleet, Mass.
An unprecedentedly bad year for beached dolphins on Cape Cod might have to do with warming waters changing the availability of the animals’ food, said scientists hoping to curb the strandings.
Cape Cod, the Massachusetts peninsula beloved by beach tourists and seafood lovers, has a long history of marine mammal strandings. That is partially because of dramatic changes in the tide that sometimes trap wayward dolphins if they swim too close to shore.
But this year is different. The International Fund for Animal Welfare, which responds to marine mammal strandings, said on Nov. 21 it has responded to 342 live, stranded dolphins this year, and that is five times more than its annual average of 67.
An already bad year got worse earlier this month when the organization was inundated with calls about beached dolphins. More than 50 of the animals were stranded on multiple beaches and waterways in the span of a week, the organization said.
The massive number of strandings has stretched the group’s resources and supplies, said Brian Sharp, marine mammal rescue team lead for the organization and a biologist by training. Scientists are still trying to determine what is causing the strandings, but they have noticed that the small fish the dolphins eat in high numbers have been swimming close the shore, he said.
The dolphins seem to be following that food source and getting themselves in jeopardy, Sharp said.
“Any effect of climate change on ocean temperature, salinity, is going to affect the prey resource of the fish,” he said. “That as part of the food web is going to have kind of that ripple, that cascade effect throughout the food web, which eventually leads to marine mammals.”
Cape Cod is located near important dolphin feeding grounds, and the peninsula is popular with summer whale watchers because of its diversity of species. Most of the stranded dolphins have been common dolphins, Atlantic white-sided dolphins, Risso’s dolphins and bottlenose dolphins, Sharp said.
Of the 342 stranded dolphins, 293 were able to be released back into the wild, Sharp said. More than 90 additional dolphins were found dead upon stranding, he said.
This post was originally published on here