La Semana

Drought-threatened Amazon dolphins studied for climate change impact

- BY BRUNO KELLY

MANAUS, Brazil (Reuters) -A team of biologists, vets and Gshermen temporaril­y captured rare freshwater dolphins in the Amazon this week to study their health in hopes of avoiding a repeat of the deaths of hundreds of the mammals last year due to a severe drought.

The dolphins were brought ashore for blood tests and other examinatio­ns and returned to Lake Tefé in the Amazon basin as soon as the researcher­s had Gnished their work, which included inserting a microchip to monitor their behavior via satellite.

Fishermen were careful not to injure an adult female dolphin during capture and kept her close to her offspring to avoid stressing the animals.

"She relaxed and we could do all the tests. She appeared in good health," said project leader Miriam Marmontel of the Mamirauá Institute of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, which planned the expedition to temporaril­y capture up to 20 dolphins.

The work included removing a sample for a biopsy to see whether there were contaminan­ts in her blubber, and the placing of the microchip on her back, which will allow researcher­s to follow her movements and the depths she swims at, and even determine water temperatur­es remotely.

In a grim fallout from the longest drought in the Amazon rainforest's recorded history last year, induced in part by climate change, the carcasses of more than 200 river dolphins were found 'oating on Lake Tefé, which is formed by a tributary of the Amazon River.

Low river levels during the drought heated the water to temperatur­es that were intolerabl­e for the dolphins, researcher­s say. Thousands of Gsh also died in Amazon waterways due to a lack of oxygen in the water.

PINK DOLPHINS

The Amazon river dolphins, many of a striking pink color, 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 they hope to establish what caused last year's deaths before this season's drought set in as the Amazon dry season begins, so that researcher­s can react faster.

"We aim to learn more about the health of the dolphins at a time when water levels begin to go down and temperatur­es start to rise, so we can identify the changes and know whether they are due to higher temperatur­es or a toxin or pollutant in the water," she told Reuters.

The project was supported by the National Marine Mammal Foundation of California, whose researcher­s helped conduct ultrasound examinatio­ns on the dolphins.

Marmontel said most of the dolphins that perished last year were in Lake Tefé, a 45-km-wide (27-mile) expanse of water where the dolphins like to be located, just off the Solimoes River.

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