Dolphin program plans more tests
Andrew Edwards
Orange Coast College professor Dennis Kelly plans to continue
research on two dolphins that died last year in Newport Harbor --
work that he says shows just how unsafe the harbor is.
Kelly and students in the school’s Coastal Dolphin Survey Project
plan to unearth the older dolphin from its Shellmaker Island resting
place in an attempt to extract flesh for scientific studies.
The entire dolphin will not be exhumed during the digging, which
Kelly said could happen sometime next week.
“We’re just going to dig down to the dolphin, then try remove
flesh, any flesh, even if its dried, from the carcass,” Kelly said.
“Our molecular biology person here at Coast said they can run DNA
actually off of flesh that’s fairly decomposed.”
A DNA test could help Kelly and his students determine if the two
dolphins that were found dead last year in Newport Harbor were
related.
“We’re going to do some DNA testing just to make sure that they’re
mother and calf,” student Nikolai Alvarado said. Alvarado is the
project’s special projects director.
The two dolphins died last year; they had spent some time in
Newport Harbor. The older dolphin was found in September, and the
younger animal was discovered in December. Lab studies completed in
March showed the younger dolphin had levels of mercury and other
poisons in its tissues.
If possible, tissues from the older dolphin would be analyzed for
contaminants, but the likelihood of any flesh being suitable for that
kind of testing would be a longshot, Kelly said.
In addition to lab studies, students in the dolphin project are
working on a skeletal display of the dolphins to be installed at the
Back Bay Science Center and a video documentary on the animals.
“We want to make an exhibit to let people know what happened to
them,” Alvarado said.
The amount of poisons found in the younger dolphin alarmed Kelly.
He and students in the project intend to report the results of their
dolphin studies in a scientific paper to present to the Santa Ana
Regional Water Quality Control Board. The board has authority over
waters that flow into Newport Bay and Newport Harbor.
“I think this may be a watershed issue, not a city of Newport
Beach issue,” Kelly said.
Dolphins are at the high end of the food chain and the dead
animals could have ingested toxics by eating contaminated fish, Kelly
said. He believes a lesson of their research so far is not to eat
fish caught in the harbor.
“There’s a lot of people who fish off their dock, or their kids
fish off their dock,” Kelly said. “They shouldn’t be doing that.”
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
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