Animals
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Fish

U.S.: Thousands of fish turned up dead in Indiana lake

fish ,kill,indiana

Seymour, Indiana- Imagine thousands of fish literally turn up dead in a lake near your home. That's just what happened at a lake in Seymour, Indiana. So, our viewers called us asking us to get answers.

Neighbors say they've never seen anything like this before.

Stinking, dead fish giving off a foul odor and floating in the lake is what Corey Lanier and his neighbors came across this weekend

Bizarro Earth

Australia: Dugong deaths 'ecological disaster'

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© David Hannan

Environmentalists have again warned of an ecological disaster at the southern end of Queensland's Great Barrier Reef, following the discovery of a dead dugong.

It was found washed up on a beach in Gladstone Harbour, the fourth dugong, along with three dolphins and 40 turtles that have been found washed up around the harbour since May.

Friends of the Earth spokesman Drew Hutton said he had seen first-hand the destruction around the harbour since construction of the LNG facilities had started.

Binoculars

US: Teens Mauled by Grizzly in Alaska

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© Photodisc
The teenage outdoor education students, having progressed to the point of being on their own in the vast Alaska wilderness, were lined up single file for a river crossing when the grizzly burst with fury into the front of the line, badly mauling two in the group and injuring two more.

Those in the front screamed of the bear's presence. The bear was with her cub when she attacked, according to state troopers.

The teens were in a group of seven participating in a 30-day backcountry course conducted by the National Outdoor Leadership School when the attack occurred Saturday night in the Talkeetna Mountains north of Anchorage. They were rescued early Sunday after activating their emergency locator beacon and tending to their most seriously wounded.

Those in the back of the line heard the warning, with the two at the front of the line taking the brunt of the attack, trooper spokeswoman Megan Peters said.

Another group of seven students and three instructors was waiting about six miles away for a helicopter hired by the Lander, Wyo.-based NOLS, said Bruce Palmer, a spokesman for the organization, which leads many such excursions in Alaska and elsewhere.

Bizarro Earth

Australia: Another dugong death

dudong
© ContributedThis dead dugong was found on Witt Island by Clive Last, who is increasing worried by marine animal deaths in Gladstone Harbour

Another dead dugong has been found in Gladstone Harbour, and the man who found it wants some answers.

Clive Last, who in May discovered a dead dolphin on Turtle Island, was shocked on Friday afternoon when he found the body of a dead dugong on Witt Island.

Mr Last is wary of suggestions marine animal deaths this year can be attributed to boat strikes and net fishing. He said those explanations didn't match his observations on the harbour.

Attention

15 Whales Dead in Northwest Scotland

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© Florida Keys News BureauTwo stranded pilot whales struggle in shallow waters.
Fifteen pilot whales have died in a mass stranding near the northwestern tip of Scotland, according to a rescue charity.

Rescuers have been trying to save a pod of around 60 long-finned pilot whales in the Kyle of Durness, a sea inlet near Cape Wrath.

Around 35 beached as the water receded at low tide and 20 were refloated using inflatable pontoons as the water level rose again.

However, the remainder perished, said the British Divers Marine Life Rescue (BDMLR) charity.

The rescue effort was stood down following nightfall Friday and was to resume after sunrise Saturday.

Mark Simmonds, head of science at the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, said the Kyle of Durness looked like a "whale trap".

"Something may have startled the group further out to sea and they panicked, came into this unusual situation and were unable to find their way out.

Bizarro Earth

Rare Sei Whale Spotted in Scottish Waters

Sei Whale
© Danny KerrDanny Kerr captured a shot of the whale between Islay and Gigha.
Scientists believe a rare Sei whale has been sighted in Scottish waters - possibly only the ninth such sighting here in the past 50 years.

The mammal was photographed by Scots paramedic Danny Kerr off the west coast, between Islay and Gigha, as he was flying to pick up a patient.

He later sent the image to the marine charity Sea Watch, which enlisted the help of two American academics.

All three independently concluded that it was a Sei whale.

Adult Sei whales can weigh between 20 and 30 tonnes and grow up to 19.5m in length.

Fish

US: Sick Fish, Fish Kill Reported in Gulf

fish kill
© Lexey SwallAn unusual arrival of offshore fish, some of them dead, littered the shoreline Monday in North Naples. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is testing water samples and shark tissue to determine the cause of the dark water and fish kill. Scientists suspect low-dissolved oxygen, possibly as a result of a dying algae bloom, are killing the fish. The health department has not advised swimmers to stay out of the water.

Dead fish have been washing up on the beaches at Naples since Monday.

And commercial fishermen out of Madeira Beach and marine scientists have been conducting a survey of fish with sores and deformities in the Gulf of Mexico since the first week of July.

The exact cause of these problems hasn't been pinpointed yet, and the reports have been isolated dating to the winter.

But two possible reasons being mentioned are the Gulf oil spill last April and a "dead zone'' devoid of oxygen.

The St. Petersburg Times reported last week that three 10-day trips into the Gulf from Madeira Beach and Panama City that departed July 6, July 8 and July 18 were searching for fish that might have some sort of disease. They are catching and checking fish from the Keys across to Texas.

The Times report said red snapper and vermilion snapper caught by fishermen showed "wounds straight through their muscle tissue.''

Fish

US: Louisiana Neighborhood lake full of dead fish

Prairieville, Louisiana- Hot weather is causing trouble for a Prairieville neighborhood. However, it's not just the heat causing trouble. People there are dealing with a lake, full of dead fish.


About 15 houses surround the lake in the Cypress Lake subdivision in Prairieville.

Eye 2

US: Snakes Threaten Hawaii's Fragile Island Ecosystem

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© The Associated Press / Hawaii Department of AgricultureIn this July 5, 2011 photo provided by the Hawaii Department of Agriculture, Keevin Minami, Plant Quarantine Inspector, HDOA, left and Dwain Uyeda, Reptile Supervisor, Honolulu Zoo, right, examine a 9-foot boa constrictor in Honolulu. Long kept out of Hawaii’s paradise, snakes are increasingly slithering into the islands, posing a grave danger to tropical birds, colorful plants and the vibrant environment that draws millions of tourists to the state each year.
Hawaii has been largely successful in preventing snakes from entering the island paradise over the years and avoiding the grave danger they present to tropical birds, colorful plants and the vibrant environment that draws millions of tourists to the state each year.

But the recent capture of escaped pet snakes - illegal in Hawaii - and the infestation of Guam by brown tree snakes, which could easily make it here via cargo ship, have alarmed wildlife and agriculture officials.

Without any natural predators, authorities say it wouldn't take much for snakes to take root and multiply, potentially killing off endangered birds and flowers that make the islands special. Hawaii, home to more endangered species per square mile than anywhere else in the world, could potentially face the same fate as Guam, where brown tree snakes overran the island following World War II and wiped most birds from the skies.

"It has a high potential to be devastating to Hawaii," said Earl Campbell, assistant field supervisor for the Pacific Islands Fish and Wildlife Office within the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. "I would look at Guam as the template for what could happen in a range of tropical Pacific Islands that have no snakes."

Hawaii is so serious about keeping snakes out that the fine for possessing an illegal animal can reach $200,000 and up to three years in prison. But snake owners are granted amnesty if they willingly turn their pets over.

Fish

U.S.: Florida Fish & Wildlife researchers say 'pretty large' fish kill warrants investigation

Sharks, rays, crabs, and all kinds of fish have been turning up dead on Southwest Florida beaches for the past two days.


The dead fish started washing ashore Monday morning near Vanderbilt Beach in Collier County, just north of Naples. Now, state researchers in the Bay Area work to figure out what's killing all the sea life.

"We can microscope, analyze the cells at the cellular level," Biologist Catalina Brown tells 10 News as she sorts through tissue samples from dead fish at the Fish & Wildlife Research Institute in St. Petersburg. Brown is one state researcher working to solve the mystery of what's killing all sorts of fish in Collier County.