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Birds, dolphins, sea-lions sickened, killed by algae in California
AFP
Published: Friday April 27, 2007

A morass of toxic ocean algae swamping sections of California's coastline has sickened hundreds of birds, sea lions and dolphins, environmentalists said Friday.

Animal protection agencies have reported a sharp increase in fatalities and illnesses amongst wildlife because of the thick "blooms" of algae that have appeared in the state's coastal waters.

The International Bird Rescue Research Center in San Pedro compared the environmental impact of the algae to an oil spill, saying in a statement that several species of animals had been affected.

"I have been doing this work for 35 years and I have never seen anything like this as far as the number of species affected, other than an oil spill," IBRRC director Jay Holcomb said.

"We have very serious concerns about what is happening to seabirds, and how it may affect populations."

Animals are being sickened by domoic acid, a naturally-occurring microscopic algae. Birds and sea mammals ingest the toxin by consuming fish and shellfish which consume the algae.

Although algae blooms appear every year, environmentalists say this year's crop is unusually thick and appears to be carrying higher concentrations of the acid, making it deadlier than normal.

Exact numbers of the animals were not immediately available, but individual agencies reported dozens of cases.

Debbie McGuire, the director of the Wetland and Wildlife Care Center in Huntington Beach, south of Los Angeles, told AFP her center had seen 78 deaths from the algae since Sunday, with 11 more animals still being treated.

"We've had outbreaks before but it just seems to be a little bit more potent this time around," McGuire said.

Most concern focused around California brown pelicans, an endangered species, McGuire said. Symptoms of birds poisoned by domoic acid were disorientation, head bobbing, she added.

"We had one report of a bird sitting in a car park of a supermarket when of course they should be at the beach or in the ocean," McGuire said.

Emily Wing, a director at the Pacific Marine Mammal Center in Laguna Beach, southern California, 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Los Angeles, said 22 animals, mostly sea lions, had been treated at the center.