Sea Birds Dying

WOODIE13

2023 TURKEY CHALLENGE 1st place Team
Dead, dying seabirds washing up on S.C. shores

Public advised not to touch creatures, which are dying of unknown causes

By JOEY HOLLEMAN

Staff Writer


Birds that typically stay well offshore are showing up by the dozens on South Carolina beaches, either dead or dying.

Wildlife officials aren’t sure what’s causing the deaths, though it appears to have some neurological root, said Al Segars, a veterinarian with the S.C. Department of Natural Resources.

Because of the mystery, officials warn people who spot the birds on beaches or inland to leave them alone. Ignore the instinct to pick up a staggering bird and instead call the local beach patrol or animal control offices, Segars said.

“Don’t take them home and try to nurse them back to health,” he said Friday.

About 150 birds have been found from northern Georgia to Cape Hatteras, N.C., this week, Segars said. Most are greater shearwaters, though some are storm petrels and gannets. In general, the off-shore birds are about the size of larger gulls.

None of the typical shorebirds — pelicans, gulls, terns — seems to be affected, Segars said.

Three ailing birds have been found at Hunting Island State Park, said assistant park interpreter Laurel Weeks. Two were dead. The other, which seemed disoriented, wandered off.

Segars said that’s typical of the birds found still alive. They stagger when they can walk, often collapsing after a while and dying. That hints at a neurological problem, which might be related to an algae bloom offshore, he said.

Toxic algae enters the food chain, and birds can be sickened by eating tainted fish.

But the die-off could be simply the typical mortality of the birds during migration. Onshore winds in recent days might be washing ashore sick and dying birds that normally would have died in the water offshore, Segars said.

Several of the birds have been sent to the Southeast Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study lab in Georgia for testing.

About 150 greater shearwaters were found dead along North Carolina’s Outer Banks in late June and early July 1995, according to the National Wildlife Health Center. Experts found those birds had died from malnourishment.
 

jason308

Senior Member
Sounds like it could be something akin to AVM. That stuff is bad news, and we used to find Bald Eagles just laying on the shoreline, alive but not doing much of anything. :( I hope to be able to research something like this when I get into grad school in a couple of years. The coots were bad about getting the AVM as well. I picked up several of them in years past. Hopefully someone will figure this thing out.

BY THE WAY, SCWDS IS RUN FROM THE BEST SCHOOL THERE IS- UGA!!!
 
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