120 Dolphins Die in Amazon Over Extremely High Temperature
- Al Jazeera
Brazil – The carcasses of 120 river dolphins died in the Amazon Rover in Brazil over the last week in circumstances that experts suspect were caused by extremely high temperature.
The Mamiraua Institute, a research group at Brazil’s Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation, said two more dead dolphins were found on Monday in the region around Tefe Lake.
Experts believe high water temperatures are the most likely cause of the deaths as temperatures since last week have exceeded 39C in the Tefe Lake region.
Thousands of fish have also died, local media reported, “We have documented 120 carcasses in the last week,” said Miriam Marmontel, a researcher at the Mamiraua Institute.
Amazon river dolphins, many of a striking pink colour, are a unique freshwater species found only in the rivers of South America and are one of a handful of freshwater dolphin species left in the world.
Slow reproductive cycles make their populations especially vulnerable to threats.
Marmontel said roughly eight of every 10 carcasses being found are pink dolphins, which are called “boto” in Brazil, and could represent 10 percent of their estimated population in Lake Tefe.
Brazil’s Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation has rushed veterinarians and aquatic mammal experts to rescue dolphins still alive in the lake.
The scientists do not know with certainty that drought and heat are to blame for the spike in dolphin mortality. They are working to rule out other causes, such as a bacterial infection that could have killed the dolphins.
But at least 70 of the carcasses surfaced late last week when the temperature of Lake Tefe’s water reached 39C, more than 10 degrees higher than the average for this time of the year.
The water temperature declined for a few days but rose again on Sunday to 37C, experts informed.
Environmental activists have blamed the unusually hot conditions on climate change, which makes droughts and heat waves more likely and severe.