Toxics likely killed dolphin
Andrew Edwards
A young dolphin that died in Newport Harbor last year had poisons in
its blubber, liver and brain, examination of the creature has
revealed.
“It had this toxic brew of chemicals permeating its entire body,”
Orange Coast College marine science professor Dennis Kelly said.
Kelly believes the animal was likely poisoned by contaminants it
consumed in Newport Harbor.
“My hypothesis is right now that this animal’s taking up residence
in Newport Bay ended up killing it,” Kelly said.
The dolphin was found dead in December on Lido Island and a
necropsy, an autopsy for an animal, was performed that month at
Orange Coast College. The dolphin’s tissues were analyzed at CRG
Marine Laboratories in Torrance.
Kelly said test results showed the 2- to 3-year-old dolphin had
levels of DDE, tributyltin, PCBs and mercury in its body.
DDE is a toxic compound that forms when DDT, a banned pesticide,
breaks down. Scientists found DDE in the animal’s blubber, at a
concentration of 78 parts per billion.
“That’s enough to cause an animal real trouble,” Kelly said. “It
can crash their immune systems; it can cause them to produce hormones
that don’t work correctly.”
Tributyltin, a toxic substance in boat paints, was discovered in
the dolphin’s liver and blubber, Kelly said. PCBs are chemicals that
were used as fire retardants until they were banned by the federal
government in 1976. Mercury was found in the dolphin’s liver and
brain.
Kelly said the dolphin’s death illustrates a need for tighter
controls on urban runoff. He believes the contamination ingested by
the dolphin came not only from pollutants directly deposited into the
harbor but also frominland watersheds.
“We really need to stop our runoff from running directly into the
ocean,” Kelly said.
Water discharges into Newport Bay are under the authority of the
Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Board.
The agency’s water pollution controls include storm water
diversions and the use of wetlands to naturally treat water, but
extensive processes, such as sewage treatment, do not happen with
runoff, said environmental program manager Joanne Schneider.
In 2002, the Environmental Protection Agency set limits on the
amount of pollutants the water board could allow in Newport Harbor.
The water board will likely release a draft plan on how to implement
those limits next month, Schneider said.
Defend the Bay, a Newport Beach environmental group, is seeking
money to fund its own study on how to limit pollution in the Back Bay
and the harbor, group founder Bob Caustin said.
He also said the poisons found in the dolphin serve as a warning
against fishing around Newport Beach.
“Don’t eat the local fish,” Caustin said.
Last year, the Orange County Health Care Agency released a study
indicating five local fish species -- California corbina, jacksmelt,
yellowfin croaker, spotted sand bass and California halibut -- could
be contaminated.
Corbina is the only species on that list the state’s Office of
Environmental Health Hazard Assessment has posted a warning for.
The agency recommends that fish be eaten only once every two
weeks.
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