8 Nonhuman Casualties of Hurricanes

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Hurricane Sandy . The Aftermath Ocean Grove, New Jersey
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Even if you’ve never lived through one, you’ve seen the devastation a hurricane can cause to human settlements. News photos document in harrowing detail the loss of life and property that almost inevitably results when one of those storms passes through an inhabited area. Seemingly endless scenes of a ravaged New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina have indelibly impressed upon a generation the awesome and terrifying destructive power of those natural phenomena. But humans aren’t the only creatures at the mercy of the raging winds, torrential rains, and surging seas brought by hurricanes. The flora and fauna of coastal areas must contend with those forces as well, and, though many are adapted to the harsh climatic variations of their habitats and may even be able to exploit them, they hardly escape unscathed.

  • BirdsThe bird's final roosting perch. A first record for the Cayuga Lake Basin--likely a waif from hurricane Ike. It was found dead the next morning. Frigatebirdfrigate birdA magnificent frigate bird (Fregata magnificens) that was blown off course by Hurricane Ike in 2008. It ended up at Cayuga Lake, Ithaca, New York, U.S., where it later died, likely from starvation.SeabamirumBird-watchers love a hurricane. Species rarely sighted inland—or at all—are often blown off track by hurricane winds and end up stunned and disoriented in places that they wouldn’t normally frequent. Some may fight through the winds only to be trapped in the eye of the storm and simply end up wherever the storm dissipates, sometimes many miles inland. Although many are able to rest and relocate, some may perish if they are separated from their flocks or end up in a locality where they are unable to find food. The damage done to trees and other plants can severely affect breeding and feeding habitats for some species. Conversely, shorebirds that require an open beach to nest may benefit when weedy vegetation is cleared off by storm surges.
  • FishAugust 30, 2011- About a hundred dead fish floated in this canal at Mattamuskeet. Others could be found on the top of bridges stranded by the surge from Hurricane Irene.fish killFish killed by a storm surge during Hurricane Irene in 2011, Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge, Fairfield, North Carolina, U.S.Tom MacKenzie, U.S. Fish and Wildlife ServiceHurricanes kill millions of fish—both directly, through the massive waves they create, and indirectly, by rapidly altering the chemical balance and temperature of the water. Ocean water surging into brackish estuaries increases salt concentrations that may harm delicate fish larvae that prefer lower levels of salinity. Torrents of fresh rainwater running off of coastal lands and into the ocean have a similar effect on nearshore fish populations that prefer saltier waters. High winds bring cool nutrient-loaded water to the surface, shocking fish that are accustomed to warmer waters and fueling the growth of algae blooms, which deplete the water of oxygen. Even reef fish, somewhat protected by their coral homes, may be harmed: they can be flushed into the open by strong waves, leaving them vulnerable to predation.https://e5ca761163b5ebfc64177135f8c975a9.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html
  • Marine MammalsDolphin swims in Ding Darling, NWR, Big Pine Sound, Aug. 17, 2004.dolphinA dolphin swimming in the waters off J.N. “Ding” Darling National Wildlife Refuge, Sanibel Island, Florida, U.S., two days after Hurricane Charley, August 2004.U.S. Fish and Wildlife ServiceMarine mammals such as dolphins and manatees may be injured or beached by massive waves. Manatees, which are not the most maneuverable of critters even at the best of times, may be swept from the quiet coastal waters that they prefer out into the open ocean, where they may become disoriented and die. The dilution of salt water by rainwater in coastal and bay areas is thought to have a detrimental effect on the health of cetaceans, leading them to move offshore. (They may be following their piscine prey that also like it salty.) Catastrophic storms like Katrina may, in fact, have a silver lining, if a slippery one. Because of the near-total destruction of the ships that fished the Gulf of Mexico prior to the storm, fish populations boomed in its wake, leaving more for dolphins to prey upon and thus resulting in a greater number of dolphin births, according to one study.
  • Sea TurtlesGreen sea turtle underwater. (Chelonia mydas) (reptile, sea turtle)green turtleGreen sea turtle (Chelonia mydas).© Frank Burek/Corbis RFThe abnormally rough wave action during a hurricane usually results in a fair number of sea turtle deaths. However, even greater mortality may result from the damage done to the turtles’ nests by storm surges, which may either expose their eggs to the elements or bury them too deeply for the hatchlings to emerge. The reptiles are at further risk from man-made debris that has been washed into the ocean—and may resemble food to them—and from the damage done by sedimentation and pollution to the sea grass beds that some species rely upon for food.
  • CoralsStaghorn coral grows quickly. This stand has grown back since Hurricane Lenny in 1999. Note the many small fishes living among the branches.staghorn coralA stand of healthy staghorn coral, having recovered from damage sustained during Hurricane Lenny in 1999, off the coast of Bonaire in the Lesser Antilles.NOAA/OAR/OERUnlike any of the above organisms, corals must weather the storm in place. There’s no hope of escape when you’re a sedentary creature. Though the calcareous skeletons of hard coral species afford some protection against the brutal action of waves, those very skeletons can prove a liability to neighboring colonies: pieces of coral that break off can damage adjoining portions of the reef when they are slammed together by churning currents. In the wake of a hurricane, recovering reefs may be further threatened by sediment and nutrient deposition, which can prevent photosynthesis of symbiotic algae and encourage the growth of competing algae species, smothering already-stressed colonies.
  • ShellfishBlue crab (Callinectes sapidus)blue crabBlue crab (Callinectes sapidus).© Nellaine Price/Survival/Oxford Scientific FilmsLike corals, sedentary shellfish such as oysters can sustain mechanical damage as a result of increased wave action and may be washed ashore, where they cannot survive. As filter feeders, they may also succumb to pollutants washed into the ocean by the hurricane. Salinity changes may also be fatal. Mobile shellfish, such as crabs and shrimps, may simply move away from treacherous waters until they recover, but they too are susceptible to the power of the waves.
  • TreesKatrina Destruction, New Orleans, trees, Louisiana,trees destroyed by Hurricane KatrinaA stand of trees killed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.© Gino Santa Maria/FotoliaImages of palm trees bending and breaking under the force of hurricane winds are nearly ubiquitous in any hurricane news coverage. What hurricane report would be complete without a distressed reporter getting soaked while a comically prostrated palm is whipping about in the background? Damage to coastal trees doesn’t end when the winds stop, though. Storm surges inundate the roots of coastal forests with saline ocean water, which may stress and eventually kill them. The spaces left by trees downed in the storm or salted to death may allow more-vigorous invasive species to take over valuable real estate, crowding out native seedlings that otherwise might help to regenerate the forest. (Most coastal forests in the hurricane zone of the United States are already heavily fragmented.) Species of animals that depend on the trees for food and shelter are left vulnerable. When downed trees and their foliage fall in bottomland swamps, the high volume of decaying matter can deoxygenate the water, leading to fish kills. In drier areas they can later fuel forest fires.
  • Sea GrassesA seagrass meadow. Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary.sea grassSea grass, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, Florida, U.S.NOAASea grasses are highly vulnerable to the increased flow of sediment caused by hurricane runoff. The grasses can be buried, but even those that aren’t may be prevented from photosynthesizing, because turbid waters block sunlight from reaching the ocean floor. The loss of sea grass beds can be catastrophic for a wide variety of wildlife, from the sea turtles, manatees, and waterfowl that feed on them to the fish and other sea life that use them as breeding grounds.

American Mountain Lion Trophy Hunting Enthusiasts Trot Out a Stream of False Information in Prop 127 Fight

By Wayne Pacelle

Ballots will be mailed to 4.5 million Colorado voters today, and citizens can submit completed ballots at any time between now and Nov. 5.

Prop 127 is a major focus for animal welfare advocates and conservationists in the Rocky Mountain State and the nation because it seeks to halt Colorado’s unnecessary and ruthless practices of trophy hunting and commercial fur trapping of mountain lions and bobcats.

This very small segment of 2,000 trophy hunters and 700 fur trappers kills as many as 2,500 lions and bobcats for their heads, hides, and beautiful coats during a four-month assault, rigging the hunt with packs of dogs, bait, cage traps, and high-tech gadgetry. They even use drones.

As is typical in so many ballot issue campaigns, big-money opposition seeks to confuse voters and prompt them to opt for the status quo.

The biggest funder of the “No on 127” campaign is a Virginia-based Concord Fund, which focuses on federal judicial appointments and has no professional staff with any conservation or wildlife experience. The second biggest funder, if you add up donations from its chapters around the country, is Safari Club International, which has an elaborate awards program for its members who amass trophies of dead wildlife. Its best-known award is the “Africa Big Five,” requiring the shooting of an African lion, a leopard, an African elephant, a rhino, and a Cape Buffalo. A lesser-known prize is “Cats of the World,” and North American mountain lions and Canada lynx qualify as trophies for that awards category.

On Prop 127, these special interest groups have offered up a steady stream of misinformation to mislead and confuse voters so they can continue recklessly killing native wild cats. Today, I address false claims to set the record straight.

False Claim: Trophy hunting is already banned in Colorado.
Fact: There is no statute or regulation in the state that says anything about banning trophy hunting. Trophy hunting is perfectly legal in Colorado, and there is a tiny segment of the larger hunting community obsessed with obtaining a nose-to-tail trophy of a lion. Most of the successful trophy hunters shell out $8,000 to a hunting guide, who maintains the dog packs, drones, and GPS equipment, and sets up a point-blank shot at a lion clinging to a tree branch.

Only California bans trophy hunting of lions, and it would have been big news had Colorado forbidden trophy hunting. But no one has even taken note of such a ban, because it doesn’t exist. It is a political fabrication, not a policy truth.

Trophy hunting of lions — in Africa and in the Americas — has been going on since the 19th century. Lion hunting is now banned in the vast majority of South American countries, and it’s tougher for Americans to hunt African and Asiatic lions overseas because the species are classed as threatened or endangered across their ranges. That means that a major reservoir of potential cat trophies exists in North America, and there are trophy hunting vendors who caters to this subculture and deliver the point-blank shot and then the trophy for mounting and display.

Indeed, it’s not hard to find promotions of “trophy hunting” by the network of professional hunting guides who offer “guaranteed kills” of trophy “toms” to their fee-paying clients, such as this one from Huntin’ Fool. The term “trophy” is ubiquitous among the non-purged sites whose owners charge wealthy hunters $8,000 or more to kill a lion in Colorado.

On the internet, and specifically on the websites of hunting guides, it’s plain as day that the purpose of the hunt is to secure a trophy: “We start our days very early driving roads looking for mountain lion tracks,” according to one guide on BookYourHunt. “Once we have a track located, we release hounds and catch your cat. Using GPS technology we track the hounds and precisely locate where they treed your trophy. We then determine the easiest route to take you into your trophy.” A different guide says cost depends on “the outfitter’s reputation for producing quality trophies.” A posting online by one lion-hunting guide talks of strapping a dead lion to a horse, with the caption “tying on the trophy.

The animal welfare community didn’t invent the notion of “trophy hunting.” The trophy hunters coined it, and today’s trophy hunters are part of that tradition of wildlife exploitation. We draw the phrase directly from their literature, their promotional materials, and the celebrations.

And how would the taxidermy industry operate at all if not for trophy hunters?

False Claim: Packs of dogs are needed to allow for sex selection of male lions, so they don’t shoot the females.
Fact: If it’s their game plan to reduce the number of females killed by eyeing the cat cornered in a tree, I can assure you it’s not working. During the 2023-24 lion-hunting season, 47% of the 501 lions shot by trophy hunters were females.

Many of the females shot from a tree had dependent young tucked away in a den or roaming on their own. The shooting of those females dooms the family group. Lions can breed at any time of the year, so there is no safe season for avoiding orphaning.

The truth is, dog packs are used to rig the hunt. Mountain lion guides just arrested in Utah and Idaho all used dogs in their orchestrating of commercial kills of lions. The trophy hunts happen just about the same way in all these states. Same guides, slightly different settings.

Dogs are not allowed for any other so-called big game — not for deer, elk, or bears. Just for lions and bobcats.

False claim: Wildlife experts decide wildlife policy in Colorado.
Fact: It was the state Legislature that authorized mountain lion hunting in Colorado, and it’s the Colorado Wildlife Commission, a policymaking body appointed by seated governors, that approves annual hunting regulations that allow the use of dogs and high-tech gadgetry for lion hunting. These elected and appointed individuals are also the people who allow baiting of bobcat traps and the use of nooses and clubs to kill bobcats for their fur.

There are no requirements for either appointed wildlife commissioners or state lawmakers to have undergraduate or graduate degrees in any discipline of wildlife science or ecology. But even if they did — and precious few of these decision-makers do — it doesn’t mean that they have a monopoly on truth. Matters of trophy hunting and hunting methods are matters of values, ethics, and science. There are MDs, DVMs, and PhDs on both sides of just about every policy issue in America — from medical and veterinary research to health policy to criminal justice reform to agriculture policy. To cite the clearest example in our history of scientists getting it wrong, look at how the smoking industry trotted out experts and bamboozled policy makers for years and told the public that smoking posed no major health risks.

When representative government and political appointees at state commissions fail to do their jobs, then the citizens can opt to put a ballot question to the voters, given that the Colorado Constitution allows for a direct democracy.

There have been only two instances in Colorado history when citizen initiatives secured enough signatures to place measures on the statewide ballot to promote more humane and more responsible policies related to wildlife protection: 1) bear hunting, and 2) trapping.

By a lopsided vote of more than two to one, voters in 1992 banned spring hunting of bears and any bear baiting and hounding. It was the Colorado Wildlife Commission and Colorado state wildlife agency that allowed those atrocious hunting methods to be conducted for years until voters swatted them away as cruel and unsporting.

And four years later, voters also stopped the use of cruel and indiscriminate steel-jawed leghold traps and neck and body snares to kill animals for their fur and for recreation. And, yes, that’s because the Wildlife Commission and the state wildlife agency allowed those landmines for wildlife.

Citizens have always served as a check on reckless decision-making by state legislators and government agencies. In the case of wildlife policy, the process of creating humane treatment standards for wildlife by ballot initiative has been extraordinarily sparing. In every case, voters have adopted to stop inhumane, unfair, and commercial exploitation of wildlife, and there have been no serious attempts to revisit these policies.

False Claim: Mountain lion trophy hunting is “science-based” wildlife management.
Fact: There is no research or scientific evidence to support the idea that trophy killing of lions achieves any valuable social or management purpose, whether to keep populations in check or to reduce occasional conflicts. Twenty-two wildlife scientists, many of them with field experience with lions, affirmed that notion in an open letter to Colorado voters. “Wild cats evolved in Colorado’s natural ecosystems and maintain stable populations,” reported the scientists.

Science is not an opinion, but an aggregation of information, often published in peer-reviewed journals, used to inform policy judgments. It is not an end in itself, but a means of evaluation. Good science gives us options, not answers.

Among the signatories was Dr. Rob Wielgus, former director of the Carnivore Conservation Lab of Washington State University. Dr. Wielgus did pioneering work to demonstrate that trophy hunting creates social chaos among surviving lions, with fellow scientists noting in their joint letter that “trophy hunting may also exacerbate human-lion conflicts by removing unoffending animals from the ecosystem, leaving the door open to younger cats who are more likely to be involved in conflict random recreational killing of lions.”

“These wild cat populations can and do regulate themselves, while providing a multitude of benefits to ecosystems,” commented Dr. Elaine Leslie, PhD, former chief of biological services for the National Park Service, who concluded that “the inhumane trapping and hunting of mountain lions and bobcats is not an ethical management tool.”

In addition to them, Dan Ashe has also weighed in and urged voters to approve Prop 127. Ashe was the top wildlife management official in the United States for years, with his role as director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from 2010-2016. He says trophy hunting of lions is wrong. He particularly underscores that using dogs and GPS gadgetry makes it unsporting, with the culmination of the hunt the shooting of a terrified animal in a tree.

It is an axiom of American politics that there is a bilge pump of misleading, false information washing over the public during election season. There’s no better example of this social science phenomenon than the “No on Prop 127” campaign.

Wayne Pacelle is president of Animal Wellness Action and the Center for a Humane Economy. He is the author of two New York Times bestselling books about the human relationship with animals.

Why Tanzania is doubling down on elephant hunting

Martin K.N Siele

Oct 8, 2024, 12:27am PDT

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NAIROBI — Tanzanian authorities are keen on issuing more hunting permits despite mounting international pressure for the country to ban elephant trophy hunting in the areas surrounding its border with Kenya.

Legal killings of elephants for sport in northern Tanzania have risen over the last year prompting concerns over a dwindling elephant population. This has led to international conservationist groups calling for a ban on the hunting of cross-border elephants.

While elephant hunting is permitted in Tanzania, it has been illegal in Kenya since 1973. Elephants which roam freely between the border areas have traditionally been protected by a gentleman’s agreement between the two countries, but conservationists say this has been ignored in the past year.

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At least five elephants were legally targeted and killed by trophy hunters in northern Tanzania over the previous eight months, according to various conservation groups.

But, in a letter dated Sept. 18, seen by Semafor Africa, senior Tanzanian officials and researchers doubled down on allowing the hunting of elephants in the area. They cited human-wildlife conflicts and the economic benefits derived from hunting.

“Fourteen villagers in the Longido district and more than 500 acres of crops have been trampled,” it reads in part. “At the same time, trophy hunting brings in huge benefits, funding conservation, paying rangers’ salaries, and building water wells, schools and other critical infrastructure for the communities.”

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The letter’s authors, who include representatives of the Tanzania Wildlife Management Authority, Tanzania Hunting Operators Association and the MP for Longido, wrote that Tanzania has “transparent hunting regulation” geared towards protecting both wildlife and the communities living alongside them. It was addressed to the executive editor of Science Magazine.

The New York-based journal in June published a letter by more than 20 elephant biologists and conservationists calling for a stop to the hunting of elephants in the borderlands and a harmonized conservation strategy involving Kenya and Tanzania.

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The greater Amboseli-West Kilimanjaro elephant population, spanning both sides of the Kenya-Tanzania border, is made up of approximately 2,000 individual elephants. Around 600 are males, of which 10 are super tuskers — elephants whose tusks weigh over 100 pounds each or touch the ground.

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In their letter, Tanzanian officials criticized Science magazine for failing to publish various responses submitted by Tanzanian researchers to the call by conservationists to stop elephant hunting in northern Tanzania. They accused the magazine of discrimination.

“The original letter you published, written predominantly by white authors, none of whom come from Tanzania (many instead from the Global North), only told one side of the story,” they insisted.

In response Science magazine told Semafor Africa that it had received numerous letters in response to a published letter calling for an end to elephant hunting in Tanzania and would not have space to publish all but would be publishing a subset of them.

A spokeswoman for the magazine also pushed back at suggestions of discrimination. “The Science family of journals is very focused on elevating the voices and concerns of authors based in Africa, through efforts including research, commentary, and news.”

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Martin’s view

Unlike Kenya, Tanzania’s embrace of hunters has led to the development of a booming trophy hunting industry in the country. In 2022, Tanzania’s trophy hunting industry generated a reported 63.03 billion Tanzanian shillings ($23 million).

Earnings from hunting permits are a significant revenue source for the government. Hunting licenses cost around $60,000 a year, with additional fees for hunting elephants and lions.

Communities seriously affected by human-wildlife conflict could also be more likely to support hunting. However, the killings of elephants by hunters and the supposed economic benefits may not be sustainable in the long term. according to conservationists. They project that the remaining 10 super tuskers in the area could be dead in three years.

Kenya’s wildlife conservation strategy, anchored on tourism as opposed to trophy hunting, would also be affected by a dwindling elephant population in the famed Amboseli region. It is therefore important for authorities in both countries to devise effective joint strategies for conservation in the borderlands.

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The View From Zimbabwe

Authorities in Zimbabwe last month decided to cull up to 200 elephants to help feed local communities facing acute hunger after the country’s worst drought in four decades. It would be the country’s first elephant culling since 1988 and take place in Hwange, Mbire, Tsholotsho and Chiredzi districts. Authorities said the culling would help towards decongesting the country’s main parks which can only sustain 55,000 elephants but the country is home to 84,000.

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In April, the president of Botswana threatened to send 20,000 elephants to Germany in a dispute over conservation, reported the BBC.

Police hunt suspect who shot and killed 2-year-old sea lion lying on California beach

Police are offering a reward of up to $20,000 for information about the suspect.

ByJon Haworth ABCNews logo

Thursday, October 10, 2024 10:01AM

Sea lion fatally shot on Orange County beach

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A California sea lion was fatally shot on Bolsa Chica State Beach in Orange County, and a reward is now being offered to find the person responsible.

Federal officials are hunting for a suspect who they say shot and killed a 2-year-old sea lion while it was lying on a California beach, authorities said.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Office of Law Enforcement is now offering a reward of up to $20,000 after the incident — which took place at Bolsa Chica State Beach in Orange County, California, on Aug. 7 — when the male California sea lion was found injured but alive between lifeguard stations 22 and 23 with a “fresh gunshot wound in its back,” according to a statement from the NOAA released on Wednesday.

“The Pacific Marine Mammal Center in Orange County rescued the male sea lion, but it died from its injuries the following day,” NOAA officials said.

Law enforcement is now actively seeking information on the person who shot the animal and any other details surrounding its shooting.

“The Marine Mammal Protection Act prohibits the harassment, hunting, capturing, or killing of sea lions and other marine mammals,” officials said. “However, the law allows for non-lethal methods to deter marine mammals from damaging private property, including fishing gear and catch, if it does not injure or kill an animal.”

Like all marine mammals, the California sea lion is protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act which has helped their population to continue increasing since at least 1975, after protections were put in place under the MMPA.

“California sea lions are easy to view in the wild, but this puts them at higher risk of human-related injuries and death. Feeding or trying to feed them is harmful and illegal, because it changes their natural behaviors and makes them less wary of people and vessels,” the NOAA said. “They learn to associate humans with an easy meal and change their natural hunting practices-for example, they take bait catch directly off fishing gear. Sometimes they fall victim to retaliation (such as shooting) by frustrated boaters and fishermen.”

Anyone with information about the sea lion shooting should call NOAA’s 24/7 enforcement hotline at (800) 853-1964.