Sick and stranded fur seal under care of Vancouver Aquarium - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:25 AM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Sick and stranded fur seal under care of Vancouver Aquarium

A stranded, sickly Guadalupe fur seal, rescued off the coast of Vancouver Island, is recovering at the Vancouver Aquarium.

Underweight seal found far north of its normal range

This Guadalupe fur seal was rescued off the coast of Vancouver Island. (CBC)

A stranded, sickly Guadalupefur seal, rescued last week off the coast of Vancouver Island, farfrom its normal range,is recovering at the Vancouver Aquarium.

The seal, which is emaciated and refusing food, is normally found off Mexico's Guadalupe Island off the coast of Baja California.Aquarium officials aren't sure how it made its way to the waters off Ucluelet.

Lindsaye Akhurst, manager of the aquarium's Marine Mammal Rescue Centre, said the animal was spotted Jan. 20. Officersfrom Parks Canada and Fisheries and Oceans Canada worked with aquarium staff to capture and transport the seal from Vancouver Island tothe aquarium's rescue centre.

"It was quite underweight," Akhurst said. "He's very lethargic."

Aquarium staff administered fluids and antibiotics and tried to get the seal to eat, but it showed no interest.

Resting poolside

The seal spent Fridayresting beside a pool. Staff plan to offer it more food and fluids and run tests this weekend.

Dr. Martin Haulena, the aquarium'shead veterinarian, said it is "extremely rare," for a Guadalupe fur seal to land in B.C. waters. "We've never responded to one before," she said in a statement.

Despite its lethargy, Dr. Haulena said the seal is "responsive and aware of his surroundings."

Guadalupe fur seals are a threatened species in the U.S.Last fall,thesealswere washing up sick and dead along the California coast at a rate eight times higher than normal, according to theU.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration(NOAA).

Scientists think warmer waters in the eastern Pacific Ocean may be behind the sealstrandings. An unusually warm mass of seawater stretching along much of the west coast has affectedmarine life. Some species of fish, whichthefur seals consume, may have moved farther north than usual to avoid the warmer waters.

Aquarium officials will send tissue samples from the stranded fur sealto NOAA scientists in the U.S. to test for exposure to toxic algae. Theresults may take several months.