Archive | Sea Otter

BREAKING: California Governor Signs Bill for Sea Otter Fund Extension

BREAKING: California Governor Signs Bill for Sea Otter Fund Extension

Sea Otter, (c) Gerry Ellis, Minden PicturesA win for wildlife! Earlier today, Governor Jerry Brown signed into law AB971, the pro-sea otter bill that Defenders co-sponsored with the Monterey Bay Aquarium. This law reestablishes the California Sea Otter Fund on state income tax forms for another five years.

This fund is the main source for investigating the problems southern sea otters face in California through a great research collaborative that is studying many aspects of the population.

The following is a statement from Jim Curland, Defenders’ marine program associate:

“This is a great day for sea otters! We are very grateful to Assemblyman Bill Monning for introducing this legislation reestablishing the California Sea Otter Fund for another five years. This Fund is critical to understanding the problems facing sea otters in California and figuring out ways to recover and protect this fragile population. Defenders of Wildlife greatly appreciates Governor Brown signing this bill into law today.”

Read Assemblyman Monning’s Press Release (PDF) about this great success.

Posted in Features, Sea Otter, Species at Risk, Success Stories, West Coast0 Comments

Feds Float New Recovery Rules for Sea Otters

Feds Float New Recovery Rules for Sea Otters

This blog post is a joint collaboration by Defenders of Wildlife, Friends of the Sea Otter, The Humane Society of the United States, and the Monterey Bay Aquarium.

A coalition of organizations welcomed news that California’s struggling sea otters may soon get a big boost thanks to a draft plan released by federal wildlife officials today. The plan would end a controversial “no-otter” zone on the California coast and allow the marine mammals to re-colonize their traditional habitat.

California sea otters are protected as threatened under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). In 1986, The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) implemented a translocation program that removed otters from the shoreline of Southern California and relocated them to San Nicolas Island, with the hope of establishing a second viable population that would protect the species in the event of any environmental disaster. At the same time, FWS implemented a “no-otter” zone south of Point Conception in which otters would be removed and transported back north of the zone’s boundary.

Translocation failed to promote otter recovery, and FWS subsequently determined that enforcement of the “no-otter” zone violates the ESA by jeopardizing the species’ recovery due to harm to the species during transport. FWS has long recognized that natural range expansion is necessary to achieve species recovery for the California sea otter.

For the next 60 days, FWS is soliciting public input on the proposal before making a final decision. Conservation groups that have been focused on efforts to aid the otter’s recovery were quick to commend FWS’ proposal to end the translocation program and allow for the species’ natural range expansion.

Defenders of Wildlife, Friends of the Sea Otter, The Humane Society of the United States, and the Monterey Bay Aquarium, issued the following statement:

“Today is a good day for California sea otters. We support an end to the ineffective and harmful translocation program and “no-otter” management zone. For sea otters to have a real shot at recovery, they must be allowed to return to their historic range off the coast of Southern California. If sea otters thrive again throughout their historic range, the entire marine ecosystem will benefit.”

How you can help:

The Fish and Wildlife Service is scheduled to open its 60-day comment period in the next week or so. We will provide a link on our www.saveseaotters.org web page when it’s available so you can let the FWS know that you want the no-otter zone gone!

Posted in Features, In the News, Sea Otter, Species at Risk, West Coast0 Comments

Can’t Live Without ‘Em: Southern Sea Otters

Can’t Live Without ‘Em: Southern Sea Otters

A weekly homage to endangered species, large and small

SOUTHERN SEA OTTERS

The densest fur in the animal kingdom belongs to one of the nation’s most beloved creatures—the sea otter. The southern sea otter, also called the California sea otter, is as much a part of the Golden State’s pride as killer waves and surf-n-turf diners.

Sea otters grow on average up to 4 feet long. The smaller females weigh about 45 pounds, while males can reach more than 60 pounds. Because they don’t have blubber like seals or whales to insulate them against the Pacific Ocean’s cold waters, sea otters rely on thick fur for protection against the elements.

Other than primates, sea otters are one of the few animals to use tools. They use rocks and other items from their environment like hammers to break into molluscs and other prey. They are naturally gifted hunters, perfectly adapted to their environment. Typically sea otters hunt in shallow waters of less than 60 feet, but they can dive more than 300 feet to forage the ocean floor. Because of their high metabolism, sea otters eat as much as 25 percent of their body weight each day.

Related: Live in California? Learn about the sea otter tax check off.

Despite their cunning, sea otters have remained on the list of endangered and threatened species since 1977. Originally, oil spills were considered the main threat to their survival. The sticky stuff mats their fur, diminishing its insulating abilities. And oily otters will eventually die from hypothermia or organ failure, and sometimes from swallowing oil when they try to groom themselves clean.

New findings, however, suggest there’s more foul play afoot. Since 1998, some 40-50  percent of sea otter deaths in California have been attributed to disease. While scientists say there’s no smoking gun exactly, the otter’s fondness for dining on filter feeders, like mussels and clams, could be partially to blame. These invertebrates tend to accumulate toxins from the water,  and when otters eat them, the poisons get passed along.

All-purpose Otters

Trouble for the sea otters could mean big problems for near-shore ecosystems. Sea otters keep sea urchins and other invertebrates populations in check, so they don’t devastate underwater kelp forests (large seaweeds). Kelp forests act as critical buffers against storms and provide habitat for an array of marine life — from fish to seahorses.  By locking up heat-trapping pollution like carbon dioxide, kelp forests also help in the fight against climate change.

Sea otters support life on-shore as well. As sea otter populations expand, economists predict otter-related tourism could provide up to 320  new jobs and an additional revenue of $1.5 million to $8.2 million over the next decade.

For cities like Monterey, California, the sea otter already provides huge economic boost. Evidence of the animal’s popularity is apparent throughout the Monterey Bay area, where otters adorns everything, from T-shirts and banners to mugs and posters.

Adopt a Sea Otter NowNot in California? You Can Still Help Save Sea Otters

Help California’s threatened sea otters by adopting one of these marvelous marine mammals from the Defenders of Wildlife Adoption Center.

Not only will you be sharing your appreciation for this imperiled species, but you’ll also be helping to support Defenders’ work on their behalf.

Save Something Wild!

Visit our Wildlife Adoption Center to adopt a sea otter or one of our 26 other imperiled animals today!

Posted in Features, Sea Otter, Species at Risk, Take Action, West Coast0 Comments

Top Predators Are Good for People?

Top Predators Are Good for People?

Apex predators like this wolf bring balance to their habitats.

When Defenders pushed for bringing gray wolves back to the Northern Rockies in the mid-1990s, we knew that we were supporting something even bigger: the restoration of whole ecosystems. Top predators, like wolves, bring balance to their habitats. Without them, that delicate balance falls out of whack and all animals tend to suffer. But just how important are predators to human life on Earth?

A new report, “Trophic Downgrading of Planet Earth,” published in Science last Friday suggests they’re far more crucial than you might have previously thought. It confirms that human-caused decline of large predators is resulting in widespread damage to the world’s land, freshwater and marine ecosystems: “[t]he loss of apex consumers is arguably humankind’s most pervasive influence on the natural world, […] with far-reaching effects on processes as diverse as the dynamics of disease; fire; carbon sequestration; invasive species; and biogeochemical exchanges among Earth’s soil, water, and atmosphere.”

In our backyard, hungry deer browse over suburban gardens — owing to the decline of wolves and their other predators – and all too often wander out into the streets with deadly results. Vehicle collisions with deer claim more human lives each year than any top predator in the United States.

Defenders took a leading role in enabling these findings by providing important financial contributions for a workshop at White Oak Plantation that led to this study. Based on a review conducted by an international team of 24 scientists, this seminal report finds that — in addition to damage caused by the overabundance of prey — the decline of predators contributes to the spread of disease, wildfires and invasive species, all of which have significant impacts on the quality of human life.

For example, the decline of vultures in India led to increased health risks from rabies and anthrax. In sub-Saharan Africa, lion and leopard losses have led to an overabundance of disease-carrying olive baboons, which are increasingly coming into contact with humans and eating crops. In our backyard, hungry deer browse over suburban gardens — owing to the decline of wolves and their other predators – and all too often wander out into the streets with deadly results. Vehicle collisions with deer claim more human lives each year than any top predator in the United States.

What Defenders is Doing

Some 73 million sharks are killed each year, depriving ocean habitats of this vital top predator.

This review’s findings suggest cascading effects on ecosystems are also exacerbated by land use practices, climate change, habitat loss and pollution.  Defenders is dedicated to protecting and restoring large predators, both through our support for ground-breaking research and our accomplishments in the field. Our work to protect sea otters and sharks, for example, also highlights the critical importance that these species have to their ecosystems. Without these apex predators, the habitat changes dramatically. It has been shown when sea otter populations have declined dramatically, we are left with a near-shore habitat devoid of plant and animal life as well as the loss of our great kelp forests. Similarly, with the dramatic decline in shark populations, reef systems are changed greatly with “an ecosystem dominated by small fishes and overrun by algae.”

This report comes at a time when endangered species are in dire need of defense, as debate rages in Congress over the future of the Endangered Species Act. The Interior Appropriations bill would strike a blow to the very heart of the ESA, allowing wildlife protection to be weakened, but never strengthened.

Take Action: Stop the all-out assault on the environment.

Extinctions, especially in light of this Science review, can have unanticipated and devastating consequences. It’s high time that Congress reassesses its priorities and opposes this piece of legislation, before the tide of extinction is irreversible and backfires on all of us.  In the meantime, Defenders will keep sticking up for endangered species.

Posted in Features, In the News, Sea Otter, Species at Risk, Wildlife, Wolf0 Comments

California Sea Otter Bill Passes Senate Committee Vote!

The great news keeps coming!  AB 971, introduced by California Assembly member Bill Monning (D-Carmel) to re-establish the California Sea Otter Fund on state income tax forms, passed out of the Committee on Senate Governance and Finance last week. We greatly appreciate Assemblyman Monning’s support for sea otters and willingness to introduce this legislation.

And a lot of the credit for this victory goes to our Defenders supporters in California who let their representatives know that they care about sea otters and recognize how important the funding generated by this tax check-off is.  The funding goes to continue the critical work towards understanding what is plaguing sea otter populations in California.

This is a big first step in protecting sea otters and ensuring their survival and for your help in this key victory we here at Defenders want to thank you!

AB 971 will be introduced to the Senate Standing Committee on Appropriations sometime in mid to late August and to the Senate Floor soon thereafter.  We hope we can count on you again when the time comes to contact your senators and to tell them to protect these magnificent ocean dwellers.  And once again, thank you very much for your support not only on this, but on all our issues!

Posted in Features, Photo, Sea Otter, Species at Risk, Success Stories, West Coast0 Comments

California Sea Otter Bill Passes Assembly Vote!

California Sea Otter Bill Passes Assembly Vote!

More great news from California!  AB 971, introduced and championed by California Assembly member Bill Monning (D-Carmel) to re-establish the California Sea Otter Fund on state income tax forms, was introduced Wednesday on the California Assembly floor and passed by a vote of 72-3!

Not only does a lot of credit for this bill passing the Assembly floor go to Assemblyman Monning for his tireless efforts and recognition of the importance of sea otters along California’s coasts, but it also goes to the Defenders supporters in California who let their representatives know that they care about sea otters and want to make sure everything is being done to ensure their survival.

Last year was a record year for the number of sea otters found dead (305 animals recovered) and the money raised from the California Sea Otter Fund currently supports a long-term study to determine the impacts that toxic chemicals and disease-carrying pollution are having on sea otters living along the developed areas of the California coast.  While some of these answers are known, researchers are looking for a deeper understanding of the relationships between sea otters and their habitat, questions that can only be answered with continued research funded by the continuation of the California Sea Otter Fund.

This is a big first step in protecting sea otters and ensuring their survival and for your help in this key victory we here at Defenders want to thank you!

AB 971 will be introduced to the Senate sometime in late June to early July.  We hope we can count on you again when the time comes to contact your senators and to tell them to protect these magnificent ocean dwellers.  And once again, thank you very much for your support not only on this, but on all our issues!

For more information on what is being done to help sea otters visit www.saveseaotters.org or check out another project looking at sea otters as measures of the health of nearshore ecosystems throughout North America that is being carried out by researchers from the U.S. Geological Survey, Monterey Bay Aquarium, and many others.  While this project isn’t funded by the California Sea Otter Fund, the relevance to sea otter populations in California and to the work being funded by the tax check-off is very significant.

Posted in Features, Marine Animals, Sea Otter, Species at Risk, Success Stories, West Coast0 Comments

Wolf, (c) Gary Schultz, NGSDefenders of Wildlife leads the pack when it comes to protecting wild animals and plants in their natural communities.

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