Dolphins nose about bay
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Marisa O’Neil
Newport Beach’s newest celebrity residents have silky-smooth skin, a
weakness for smelt and have attracted plenty of attention -- possibly
some unwanted attention.
Two bottlenose dolphins have been milling about in the Back Bay
near the Pacific Coast Highway bridge for nearly three weeks,
something marine mammal expert Dennis Kelly said he’s never seen. But
since word got out about the dolphins, people have been rushing to
the spot, hoping for a close encounter.
That’s OK, so long as folks stay on shore, but once people enter
the dolphins’ domain, both the animals and the humans could get into
trouble, said Kelly, professor of marine biology at Orange Coast
College.
“It’s becoming a phenomenon,” Kelly said. “If everyone ends up
going into the harbor, swimming, snorkeling or paddling out in
kayaks, they will impede what [the dolphins are] doing.”
Not only that, but they could be violating federal law, he said.
The National Marine Fisheries Service asks that people stay at
least 50 yards away from dolphins, said Joe Cordaro, a wildlife
biologist for the agency. If people get closer and disrupt the
animals’ behavior, that’s against the law.
That means let feeding dolphins eat, which appears to be why they
are there.
“Anything that [the dolphins are] doing naturally and divert from
that because of a human presence, that would be a change in
behavior,” Cordaro said.
Officials with the Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol in
Newport Beach said they’re aware of the dolphins and haven’t had to
get involved or keep people away.
Kelly said he saw the two dolphins, which he said are likely an
adult and her 1-year-old calf hunting for fish in the area, earlier
this week. But when a group of observers drove by in a Duffy boat,
they unwittingly broke up the school of fish the dolphins were
feeding on.
People who do go out on the water, he said, should just pass them
or observe from a distance and not try to interact with them, feed
them or pet them -- as tempting as that might be.
“I was down there the other day, and several people were basically
chasing them around in kayaks,” Kelly said. “Every time they popped
up, they’d paddle over in that direction. You can’t do that. You
can’t harass these animals.”
More people have been renting kayaks with the hopes of seeing the
dolphins, said Alex Yerkes with Southwind Kayaks, near the dolphins’
feeding spot.
“People really want to see them,” said Laurie Keys at the Newport
Aquatic Center. “A little girl and her dad came here [Tuesday], and
they’d never been kayaking. They saw the dolphins, and the little
girl was so excited.”
The aquatic visitors have attracted so much attention, the Back
Bay Science Center is offering special boat excursions this weekend.
The public can come, observe the dolphins from a safe distance and
hear facts about the species, said John Scholl, environmental
scientist with the California Department of Fish and Game.
In his 27 years of researching and observing local dolphins, Kelly
said, he’s never seen any so far inside the harbor or staying in one
place for so long. He thinks they may have chased food to the Back
Bay, which has a large number of smelt for them to feed on.
The animals appear to be healthy and eating well, he said. Cordaro
said he thinks they’ll find their own way out when they want to.
Kelly called the event a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” to
observe the dolphins in their natural habitat. Some of his
marine-biology students are recording their observations of the
animals from the shore.
“Every once in a while, dolphins do very unusual things, which we
don’t expect, and this may be what’s happening here,” Kelly said.
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