Posts for 'Marine Mammals' Category

Dolphins, sea lions going on guard at Bangor base

May 31, 2010 |13:47 | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

Dolphins, sea lions going on guard at Bangor baseThe Navy is keeping quiet about the Atlantic bottlenose dolphins and California sea lions that will guard Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor's shoreline, except to say they'll arrive sometime this year.

The dolphins and sea lions are the stars of a new swimmer interdiction security system, but like nuclear warheads, the Navy will neither confirm nor deny their presence.

"Because it's a security system, we are not going to discuss when or if the animals are there," said Tom LaPuzza, spokesman for the Navy Marine Mammal Program in San Diego. He added, however, that, "You can go by there in your boat and see them and know they are there."

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The Whale’s Handlers Defended

April 23, 2010 |13:51 | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

The Whales Handlers DefendedThe beached humpback whale in East Hampton earlier this month,  a representative of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the federal agency that has jurisdiction over marine mammals, spoke out this week, calling the negative reactions unfounded.

    “People are very well intentioned and we greatly appreciate the public support of these animals,” said Trevor Spradlin, a spokesman for NOAA who was part of the stranding team.

However, he said, people’s emotional response to the stranding may have clouded their perceptions of what was possible or practical when dealing with such a large animal, about which even the world’s foremost experts know relatively little.

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Starving Sea Lion Pups Wash Up on Calif

March 18, 2010 |16:17 | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

Starving Sea Lion Pups Wash Up on CalifMarine 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 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. He told the Orange County Register that this year's cases were "a little worse."

Let wild animals be wild

March 10, 2010 |13:48 | General Information | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

Let wild animals be wild.Last month, at the SeaWorld amusement park in Florida, a whale grabbed a trainer, Dawn Brancheau, pulled her underwater and thrashed about with her. By the time rescuers arrived, Brancheau was dead.

The death of the trainer is a tragedy, and one can only have sympathy for her family. But the incident raises broader questions: was the attack deliberate?

Did the whale, an orca named Tilikum and nicknamed Tilly, act out of stress at being held captive in a sterile concrete tank? Was he tired of being forced to perform to amuse the crowds? Is it right to keep such large animals in close confinement?

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Dolphins can turn on diabetes based on food availability, discovery could help treat humans

February 24, 2010 |14:01 | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

Dolphins can actually "turn on" diabetes and turn it off again depending upon whether there’s a lot of food available to them or very little, according to new research. The discovery of the mammals’ unique ability to switch in and out of having the disorder may one day help find treatments and a cure for diabetes in people.

Dolphins can turn on diabetes based on food availability, discovery could help treat humans

Researchers think the dolphins’ habit of switching in and out of diabetes is due to a need to keep blood sugar levels elevated in order to nourish the animal's large brain. It may be an ability humans once had, too. Some 23.6 million Americans have diabetes, according to Pam Cooper, spokesperson for the American Diabetes Association, and 90% of these have Type 2 diabetes. About one in three diabetics don’t know they have the disorder, which contributes to more than 200,000 deaths annually in the United States.

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Humpback fountain

January 30, 2010 |16:02 | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

WHY DO THEY do it? Why does an animal weighing perhaps 35 tonnes spend such energy propelling itself clear of the sea, twisting long, knobbly pectoral fins in the air to land on its back in a great gout of spray? It’s the most forceful, spectacular action known among mammals, shared even with blue whales, the biggest mammals in the world, writes MICHAEL VINEY.

Humpback fountain

It’s to shake off parasites, say some – all those little whale lice chewing in the folds of its skin. Or to strip off a harmless but often heavy load of barnacles (on one humpback’s head they weighed 1,000lb or 454kg). Or to slough off dead skin. Or to stun a shoal of herring. Or to scare competitive dolphins.

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Surfers watch killer whales attack dolphins

December 17, 2009 |12:17 | Mammals News | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

Surfers watch killer whales attack dolphinsOne of the surfers on lower Eyre Peninsula, Jamie Kidney, says the attack was an incredible sight. "Chaos, you just saw monstrous amounts of white water and then a dolphin would go flying in the air, a killer whale would jump out of the water, grab it and body slam it," he said.

"They were just jumping out the water attacking dolphins and it was just chaos really. "Normally what you see great whites do to seals and that."

Surfer Anton Storey also watched in awe as the whales flipped dolphins into the air. "When the killer whales turned up a whole heap of dolphins started shooting towards the shallows there," he said.

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Appetite Returning For Rescued Sea Lion

December 10, 2009 |13:53 | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

Appetite Returning For Rescued Sea LionThe animal is suffering from damage to his nasal passage that authorities believe is the result of a gunshot wound.  Jim Oswald is a spokesman for the Sausalito-based Marine Mammal Center where the sea lion is getting treatment.

“He’s still in critical condition. But he is eating. He ate about four pounds of herring which is good. The veterinarians are certainly keeping an eye on that. Continue with the antibiotic treatments and seeing if they can get him to increase his weight.”
 
Late last month, authorities arrested a Sacramento fisherman in connection with shooting the sea lion. California game wardens arrested 43-year-old Larry Allen Legans on misdemeanor charges of animal cruelty and negligent discharge of a firearm. Legans told authorities he grew tired of competing with sea lions for fish…so he fired his 12-gauge shotgun at the animal.

Why Are There No Super Whales?

December 1, 2009 |13:34 | General Information | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

The question is not why are whales big but why are whales not bigger?  The blue whales reached weights of 150 tons prewhaling.  To appreciate how massive a blue whale is, consider it would take 15 school buses, around 10 tons in weight to equal one of these marine mammals.  Why are there no 250 tons superwhales?

Why Are There No Super Whales

This is been a pet project of mine for sometime along with why the giant isopod isn’t the size of two shoes instead of one, why the giant squid only reaches a measly half ton, and why snails are not the size of trashcans?  Along with pet projects come pet hypotheses.  For the blue whale, I considered that maybe there were constraints on the heart and circulatory system. 

Consider that a blue whale’s heart is size of Volkswagen Beetle and must pump blood over 100 feet.  Over the length of the whale blood passes through a set of tubes encountering friction along the walls of arteries and vessels, meeting resistance in capillaries, and the splitting of viscous liquid at junctions. 

A whole field developed, fluid dynamics, to deal with the complexities of such problems, but to simply it means a lot of work for a pump.  Think also about how municipal water supplies are arranged.  There are multiple pumping stations throughout a municipality not just an increasingly large pump at the center.

This is because pumps become increasing inefficient at moving liquids over greater and greater distances, i.e. a satellite pump is needed to overcome the forces of friction in a tube or pipe.  Maybe the whale is a big as it can be for its pump, i.e. the heart, to efficiently drive blood to the whale ends.  Maybe the whale needs a second pump?

As speculative as my first idea, I also considered another.  Perhaps there is something about the amount of food a blue whale requires?  Can the density of krill limit blue whale size?  Consider krill aggregations typically occur in upwelling, and thus cold-water areas.  For a blue whale to feed it must be in cold water.  However, a blue whale cannot calf in cold water, as “little one” would not be able to thermoregulate, i.e. keep warm. 

Thus, blue whales, like many other whales, move to warmer waters to calve.  The calves consume 100-150 gallons of mile a day and weaning takes place for about six months. This weaning period is considerably shorter than you would expect for a mammal this size predicted from the mass/weaning relationship of other mammals.

A female then must be in two places at once in order to feed and calve.  Perhaps this imposes a set of constraints on blue whale size?  Further increases in size push the mass/weaning constraint and require more fat reserves than a female could possibly store.

Goldbogen et al. propose another idea supported with a great deal more theory, mathematics, and data than my pint-driven conjectures above.  Rorqual whales feed by lunge-feeding, the process of enlarging the mouth and swallowing a large volume of prey laden water.  This is energetically very expensive as a open mouth serves a parachute increasing drag, not to mention carrying a massive engulfed mouth full of water.

The total engulfed volume is a function, or scales with, the size of the skull and mount.  A relationship is considered isometric if an increase in size comes with the same proportion increase in trait or characteristic measured, in this case engulfing volume.

The relationship is allometric if the rate of increase of the measure characteristic goes up or down with increased size, i.e. larger sizes do better or worse than smaller size per unit of body size.  For example, time of weaning versus mass discussed above is an allometric relationship for mammals.

In the paper here, the authors find that in larger fin whales the skull and mouth cavities are larger than that predicted by size alone, i.e. allometric.   Bigger whales possess disproportionally larger mouths for the increase in engulfment capacity, pound for pound, of an individual.  This greater feeding capability is required for these larger whales.

 

Why Are There No Super Whales?

 

However, the authors find these allometric relationships do not go unchecked. First, bigger heads also often come with reduction of the anterior end as the whale “makes a choice” to invest energy in growth of the head or tail.  Second, this increased engulfment capacity may limit due to drag the depth in which larger whales can dive.

Given that krill descend at night this represent a considerable negative.  As the authors state even if whales are optimized for engulfment capacity with each lunge, the energy expended with eventually be greater than the energy gained. Thus, superwhales may be out the question unless whales can escape this evolutionary trajectory.  Which begs the question, will they still be whales?

Navy to use dolphins to defend Wash. base

November 20, 2009 |13:29 | Marine Mammals  By : Team X

Navy to use dolphins to defend Wash baseThe U.S Navy said it will soon use specially trained dolphins and sea lions to protect a Trident submarine base in Kitsap County, Wash.

The Navy announced Wednesday the trained animals will be used to stop divers and swimmers from breaching the security of the Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor starting in 2010, the Kitsap (Wash.) Sun reported.

Other naval bases currently use marine mammals to discover possible intruders, the Sun said. The Navy said.

The bottlenose dolphins and California sea lions to be used are capable of locating such intruders and represent the best way to enhance base security under current security requirements.

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