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Sea lions return home after toxic algae exposure

(SOUNDBITE OF SNORING)

AILSA CHANG, HOST:

Aw, sleepy princess.

This sleeping beauty is Arda (ph). She's here at LA's Marine Mammal Care Center, recovering from poisoning caused by one of the longest toxic algal blooms that Southern California has ever seen. They've sedated Arda for her final medical exam before she can be released back into the ocean.

MICHELLE RIVARD: All right, so we'll come and do her ultrasound now.

CHANG: Michelle Rivard is the director of animal health and conservation here.

RIVARD: So that's her kidney. All of this is intestinal tract. Everything looks normal.

CHANG: So what do you think? Is Arda ready to go back into the...

RIVARD: Yes, Arda looks...

CHANG: ...Sea?

RIVARD: ...Great. She's gained about 30 or 40 pounds since she's been here, and she has a nice, thick blubber layer to give her a good head start before we send her back to the ocean.

CHANG: I love it. She's all jiggly and happy.

RIVARD: She is.

CHANG: (Laughter).

RIVARD: She's very jiggly.

CHANG: Arda is one of the almost 400 sea lions and dolphins that the center took in this spring. They were poisoned by what's called domoic acid. That's the toxin produced by these algal blooms off the coast here. It can cause seizures and disorientation, and at least 1,500 animals were affected all across Southern California just this year. But now that the worst of the outbreak is over, scientists are releasing the last survivors.

RIVARD: I can also show you - we have a bunch of samples in necropsy as well.

CHANG: Oh, yeah.

And they're gathering clues from the animals that didn't make it.

RIVARD: So we're headed into our necropsy lab. So necropsy is essentially postmortem exam. So this room was very, very busy during the domoic acid bloom...

CHANG: Aw.

RIVARD: ...Unfortunately...

CHANG: Look at this...

RIVARD: ...Because there were...

CHANG: ...Table with all the implements. This is where the dead bodies would be?

RIVARD: This is where - yeah, this is where the dead bodies would be.

CHANG: There are towers of buckets in here, filled with dolphin organs, sea lion fetuses.

Oh, that's...

RIVARD: You can see a brain.

CHANG: ...Very much a brain right there.

RIVARD: Yeah.

CHANG: Is that dolphin brain or...

RIVARD: No.

CHANG: ...Sea lion?

RIVARD: This is from a sea lion pup. So this was...

CHANG: I see.

RIVARD: ...A pup that was born premature. Unfortunately, with domoic acid, we see a lot of sea lion moms not able to carry their pups to term. So that will be really interesting because we have animals at all different stages of gestation. So we're able to see...

CHANG: I see.

RIVARD: ...Fetuses at different types of their development and hopefully learn from them.

CHANG: Wow.

These samples can help scientists learn more about how the poisoning affected reproduction and whether wildfire runoff had an impact, too.

RIVARD: California sea lions are really wonderful sentinels for ocean health. They're apex predators. They feed at the same level of the food chain that we do.

CHANG: They're kind of like our front line.

RIVARD: They are.

CHANG: Yeah.

RIVARD: Yeah. They're a really, really important sentinel species, and they can tell us all kinds of really, really interesting things about the health of our ocean and the health of our marine ecosystems, as well as human health.

CHANG: And as that scientific detective work takes place, other scientists, like Justin Viezbicke at NOAA, are already looking ahead to the next big event. He coordinates the network of facilities in California that respond to these domoic acid outbreaks.

JUSTIN VIEZBICKE: Most of our facilities have done what they would do in a year in the first three months of this year.

CHANG: I see.

VIEZBICKE: So they've basically done all of what they would normally do in a very concentrated time period.

CHANG: So what happens if next year you see another big outbreak? I mean, what would you do differently?

VIEZBICKE: Well, that's the challenge, is that we've got thousands of marine mammals off this coastline. And so, you know, I think the things that we would do differently is we would try to respond quicker and more timelier. If they're alive, how do we potentially get them to our facilities faster and in more numbers? Do we start moving animals up the coast and bringing them others (ph) up there? Do we bring partners from, you know, other places around California or all around the country to come out and help us?

CHANG: In the meantime, Michelle Rivard says she recently got word that the Trump administration is dismantling a NOAA program which monitors the long-term health of sea lion populations in California's Channel Islands. It's been running for decades, and Viezbicke says its cancellation is going to leave big gaps for scientists.

VIEZBICKE: We're not going to have a good read if we get into a situation where we're having a ton of sea lions dying from domoic acid. What does that mean population-wise? Well, hard to say what the population's doing if we don't have a good read on what the pup numbers are every year. And so...

CHANG: Right.

VIEZBICKE: ...Both in short term and in long term, it's going to have some pretty big effects on stranding networks and science and really the understanding of California sea lions and their populations around the West Coast.

(SOUNDBITE OF WAVES CRASHING)

CHANG: Meanwhile, on an empty beach in nearby Portuguese Bend, Michelle Rivard and her team are preparing to release one of her very last patients from this year's outbrea, a sea lion named Patchouli (ph). She's in a crate, loaded onto the back of a big truck.

(Laughter) Oh, my goodness.

RIVARD: Yeah.

CHANG: The truck's bobbing up and down. She's feisty. She's ready to...

RIVARD: She's ready to go.

CHANG: She's ready (laughter).

RIVARD: Yeah. She's excited, yeah.

CHANG: They roll the crate down a ramp onto the smooth rocks that meet the ocean waves. And then - open sesame.

Door is lifting - there she goes. Oh, she's undulating down the rocks.

RIVARD: (Laughter).

CHANG: Oh, she is just...

RIVARD: She's making her way...

CHANG: ...Moving and grooving.

RIVARD: ...Across the rocks and...

CHANG: She is.

RIVARD: ...Taking off.

CHANG: Aw. Are you kind of, like, sad that she didn't look over and say goodbye? One last...

RIVARD: No, we'd rather have them not.

CHANG: (Laughter).

RIVARD: We really like the releases where they're like, we're out of here, good riddance.

CHANG: It's a happy ending for Patchouli, but for the scientists like Rivard, it's only the beginning of the next chapter. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Christopher Intagliata is an editor at All Things Considered, where he writes news and edits interviews with politicians, musicians, restaurant owners, scientists and many of the other voices heard on the air.
Ailsa Chang is an award-winning journalist who hosts All Things Considered along with Ari Shapiro, Audie Cornish, and Mary Louise Kelly. She landed in public radio after practicing law for a few years.
Kira Wakeam