AR-News: (no subject)
Animalara2003 at aol.com
Animalara2003 at aol.com
Thu Jun 17 00:16:35 EDT 2004
TBO.com
By MIKE SALINERO msalinero at tampatrib.com
Published: Jun 17, 2004
TALLAHASSEE - Scientists think red tide played a part in the deaths of 107
bottlenose dolphins off the Florida Panhandle this year.
The scientists are puzzled, however, by some aspects of the latest ``unusual
mortality event'' of marine mammals.
The interdisciplinary team, led by scientists from the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, said Wednesday that it had analyzed the stomach
contents of about half the dead dolphins and completed tissue tests on 28 of the
dead mammals.
Scientists found high levels of brevetoxins, which are produced by the red
tide algae, Karenia brevis.
Lesser levels of domoic acid, another toxin created by microscopic plants,
were detected in the stomachs, urine and feces of some of the dolphins.
Domoic acid has been associated with die-offs of California sea lions but
never with mammal deaths in the Gulf of Mexico.
The scientists eliminated infectious disease as a cause of death for the
animals that were autopsied.
full story:
http://news.tbo.com/news/MGB2JZ88KVD.html
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Wild animals never kill for sport. Man is the only one to whom the torture
and death of his fellow creatures is amusing in itself.
--Froude (1818-1894)
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