Starving sea lion pups wash up on Calif. beaches, experts blame El Nino ocean currents
By APThursday, March 11, 2010
Starving sea lion pups wash up on Calif. beaches
LAGUNA BEACH, Calif. — Marine mammal experts say dozens of hungry and sick sea lion pups have washed up on Southern California beaches this winter and many have died at rescue centers.
Veterinarian Richard Evans said Thursday that the Pacific Marine Mammal Center in Laguna Beach has treated 27 skinny pups since December, but only 11 have survived.
Evans says nine of the 12 pups now at his center are in critical condition, “just skin and bones.”
Rescuers say the El Nino ocean warming makes the sea lions’ prey, squid and fish, scarce.
Evans says the last influx of starving sea lions came in 1998, which was also an El Nino year. The same weather pattern has been blamed for sickening hundreds of California brown pelicans.
Information from: The Orange County Register, www.ocregister.com
Tags: Animal Health, Animals, California, Climate, Laguna Beach, Mammals, Marine Animals, North America, United States, Weather Patterns, Wildlife