When we see an animal in distress, our initial instinct is to help. We receive calls
and emails from people who have seen what they perceive as a wild animal that is hurt.
This is especially true of marine mammals in the St. Johns River or on the beach.
And while we think we need to do something, usually the best thing to do is nothing.
Don鈥檛 touch, handle or in any way come in contact with the animal. Instead, call the
appropriate agency like local animal control if it is a domestic pet, or Florida Fish
and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) if it is a marine or other wild animal.
This also applies to anything you might catch incidentally while fishing. While rare,
folks do catch things other than fish, like sea turtles, manatees, or dolphins. If
you can easily remove the hook, do so quickly but also minimize your contact with
the animal. With manatees or dolphins, under no circumstances should you remove the
animal from the water. In all cases, notify the proper agency, which in Florida is
FWC. You can reach them by calling the FWC Wildlife Hotline at 1-888-404-3922 (FWCC).
When you remove a marine animal from the water, you put a great deal of stress on
the animal. Manatees, dolphins, and whales depend on the buoyancy of the water to
support their weight and that allows them to breathe. When they are out of the water,
the weight of their body compresses their lungs and makes it difficult to breathe.
Such stress can lead to death.
Recently someone may have hooked a young dolphin, then removed it from the water to
take pictures, which they then posted on a popular website. Their actions may have
led to the death of the calf. There is a strong possibility that the dolphin was sick
or injured before it was caught. That might explain why the person was able to hold
the dolphin for the picture. A young healthy animal would not be easy to hold out
of the water.
Similar advice holds for beached whales too. In almost every case, do not try to push
or pull the animal back into the ocean. The whale beached for a reason. Usually it
is sick or ill. Pulling the animal by its tail can result in additional injury. Observe
the animal, maybe keep it wet and upright so its blowhole is not in the water, and
call FWC. They have the expertise to treat and maybe successfully rescue the animal.
The same applies if you find a baby animal. It is best to leave it alone. Rarely are
animals actually orphaned. Do not pick up baby animals or remove them from their
natural environment. Our natural instinct is to help, but usually the best thing to
do is nothing. Maybe observe for a while and then notify FWC if you think the animal
is truly in danger.
Glad you asked River Life
The latest Hurricane Idalia just missed 探花族. Dora was the last hurricane
to directly hit here in 1964. Is 探花族 somehow protected from direct strikes
by its location? The somewhat twisted answer is yes, no and sort of. 探花族鈥檚
geographic position does keep it out of the path of many hurricanes. We are the western
most city on the Atlantic seaboard, and the weather patterns put us in a transition
zone which makes our weather highly variable and subject to change rapidly. However,
it really is just a matter of time before we take another direct hit. The good news
is that the science of forecasting is getting better and better. After all, Idalia
was the first major hurricane to hit the Panhandle in over 125 years.
River Life runs the first Tuesday of the month in The Florida Times-Union. E-mail
A. Quinton White, executive director of 探花族鈥檚 Marine Science Research
Institute, with questions about our waterways at qwhite@ju.edu. For more on the MSRI,
visit .