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UPDATE: Dolphin Trapped in Gowanus Canal Has Died

Witnesses say the animal stopped moving after getting stuck between a rock and a pillar.


Update, 6:15 p.m.:
The dolphin trapped in the Gowanus Canal has died, WINS 1010 reports. 

The lost animal reportedly stopped moving after getting stuck between a rock and a pillar below the Union Street Bridge shortly after 5:30 p.m.

***

Update, 4:00 pm: More details continue to pour in regarding the dolphin currently trapped in Brooklyn’s Gowanus Canal.

According to Riverhead Foundation, the dolphin was first spotted at the entrance of the waterway at 9:30 Friday morning by a citizen who phoned in the sighting.

Julika Wocial, Rescue Program Supervisor and Marine biologist for Riverhead Foundation, described the mammal as a common dolphin, adult, 6 to 7 feet long and weighing approximately 200 pounds.

For the safety of the dolphin, “we have to wait for one or two tide cycles” before any attempts to help move the creature can be made, Wocial said. Right now, experts are collecting data on the dolphin’s behavior, breathing rates and other information to determine its health.

“It is exhibiting concerning behavior,” said Wocial, “different from what it would be doing in its natural habitat.” It was unclear, however, whether the behavior changes were due to shallow water, sickness or other factors.

While the animal was breaching, you could see clouds of “black mayonnaise” in the water around it. A crowd of 200 bystanders had gathered by 3 p.m. to observe the trapped mammal swimming around the polluted Superfund site. The cut originally reported on the dolphin’s dorsal fin is superficial, witnesses have confirmed.

The most unusual thing about the incident is that the dolphin is alone, said Wocial. Typically, dolphins travel in pods and are social creatures.

“Just touching the dolphin could cause it stress,” she said. “We don’t know what the outcome will be.” 

Because the dolphin is a federally protected animal, rescuers have to be authorized to take action or attempt a rescue. No operations will be performed overnight, reps have stated, because they have to consider the safety of the responders.

David Kirby, a Gowanus resident and author of Death at Sea World, was seemingly pessimistic about the dolphin leaving the canal. “It’s really bad for this dolphin,” he told Patch. “It was in trouble before the canal. They travel in pods, so the fact that he was alone definitely means he was in distress.”

Meanwhile, William H. Gonzalez, who works at the Gowanus Pump Station, was rather distressed by the situation himself.

“This is a poor, innocent, defenseless animal,” he said. “I can’t believe the city isn’t doing anything to help get it out. It’s one of the smartest animals in the world buried in all that muck and it’s sad we can’t do anything.” 

***

Update, 2:37 pm: A statement was just issued by NYPD regarding the status of the dolphin.

"The NYPD Harbor and Emergency Service Units on the scene at the Gowanus Canal are with marine mammal experts from the Riverhead Foundation," stated Deputy Commissioner Paul J. Browne.

"At its recommendation, we are waiting for the next high tide at 7:10 p.m. to see if the dolphin can free itself," he wrote.

Police will stand by to assist Riverhead Foundation personnel when and if they decide it may be necessary "to enter the water in the morning to aid the dolphin as the tide recedes."

Stay with Patch for updates.

***

A dolphin mysteriously found its way in to a toxic Brooklyn canal Friday afternoon but has been unable to swim back out.

Rebecca Rogers-Hawson of the Gowanus Canal Conservancy said she received a call from Councilman Brad Lander at around noon, asking her to investigate the Gowanus Canal where Sackett St. meets the waterway.

"It's the first dolphin I've seen in the Gowanus Canal, and it's probably sick or injured," she said.

Rogers-Hawson speculated that the animal may have swum into the canal during high tide, got stuck and is now lost.

About a dozen police officers and three trucks from the NYPD Emergency Services Unit, parked in the Fourth Ave. Transport lot on Sackett St. near Nevins, are attempting to assist the animal.

Its dorsal fin is also cut and bleeding.

"I first saw him swimming near the Union St. bridge with a trail of blood following him," said Rogers-Hawson.

BRADY January 27, 2013 at 03:26 pm
Amazing ! So many comments about what should have been done by someone else but nobody commented on what they did to help
dillon January 27, 2013 at 07:03 pm
Brady, that is because all they did was nothing. Only Seinfeld makes money for nothing. This wasnt show biz.. A bunch of overpaid numbskulls did nothing !! Except figure out that a dolphin stuck between a rock and a hard place, struggling in sewerage and chemicals would die slowly and painfully.
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 09:41 pm
Dillon,What?Sienfeld?What are you talking about?Hey i went down to the gowanus and watched a dolphin die ,did nothing about it ,and talked shit about what i would have done and what should have been done, but did'nt do anything . yet again it's alot easier to ask why "THEY" did'nt do anything and how "I" could have done so much better but for some reason "I" did'nt do anything
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 10:31 pm
Gee Gary i didn't know that the NYPD trained it's pollice officers to rescue dolphins ,what about the garbagemen or firemen or better yet school teachers they did'nt do anything either ,but wait a city bus drove past why did'nt the bus driver slam on their brakes and jump into the water and save the day!Oh thats right ,THATS NOT WHAT THEY ARE TRAINED FOR
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 10:47 pm
obviously not so CONCERNED since you did nothing to help except type a comment on your computer
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 10:47 pm
We? What did you do
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 10:49 pm
And yet you did nothing but watch the entire episode unfold on your T.V.
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 10:50 pm
Yes why did'nt you
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 10:52 pm
your right, brooklyn has an over abundance of marine biologists
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 10:55 pm
Gary your right except i don't recall hearing about you pushing people out of the way to jump into the canal and save this poor creature
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 10:57 pm
Racist
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 10:59 pm
dillion what exactly did you do to help this poor dolphin except leave a lot of after the fact comments
BRADY January 27, 2013 at 11:03 pm
Funny how everyone here says "IF I WAS THERE THINGS WOULD HAVE BEEN DIFFERENT"the voice at the back of the crowd is always the loudest
dillon January 28, 2013 at 12:09 am
Sadly Brady, I only heard about it when the news came up on my aol screen after he (or she) died. :-(. Brady nobody thought you had to do something.. That would be crazy.. Unless you had enormous resources and some contacts with fishermen or coast guard that may have known someone who was qualified to do the rescue (and pay them for it). Sadly, our city was gifted enormous funds from hurricane sandy.. And did not use them.. For something every .. Well most nyers would have been proud of..(Bloomberg not included.. He is too busy planning his next illegally extended term)
dillon January 28, 2013 at 12:11 am
Ps.. Frankly I am surprised that the public knew about it as it uncoiled... My first thought was why didn't anybody call the press? But from the thread .. It seems a lot of people knew .. Would have known in time.
BRADY January 28, 2013 at 02:51 am
Your surprised that the public knew about it as it uncoiled ...who do you think called the press...Would have known in time.. who you...or any of the others that did nothing but comment on what they would have done but did'nt do it ...gotta love a monday morning quarterback
dillon January 28, 2013 at 05:48 am
Lanci.. Ironic you should say that.. About hilary.. Just saw Argo and apparently bill was the one who allowed that whole file on the hostages were released under the subetfuge of a made up movie. She must have been like.. I've got an original idea!! We will do a movie this w/e.. And the director will be sam bacile who will have a bag over his head.. No cast members will photograph him.. And voila.. Libya tactics .
Maybe now.. After this.. There will be at least one lawyer.. But hopefully a community that will initiate a lawsuit. They now sadly have a canary I'm the coal mine. Appalling that people in that community should have to live so close to such toxic waste in their waterways
dillon January 28, 2013 at 05:49 am
Canary in the coal mine.. Typo
Ladydi69126 January 28, 2013 at 05:50 pm
http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/glossary.htm#take Pay attention they were not allowed to touch the poor creature
Damien January 29, 2013 at 02:26 am
The PRG glossary does not include the laws and by laws wherein intervention is encouraged. This link you are sharing is a basic guideline intended for use by professional or indigenous fishermen or dolphin/whale enthusisasts. There is no "law" that prohibits anyone from helping a stranded marine mammal. The police went above and beyond the call of duty and in the end it was the opinion of the marine biologists to follow a proper protocol -- which was to await a higher tide and see if the animal would swim away. What many of the commentors so not realize is that the "qualified" people on the scene and behind the scenes already knew that the dolphin was doomed and thusly they were careful about how they worded things. Just look at the ignorant reactions being written out here on this thread. Of course marine biologists and zoologists have to very careful when they deal with situations like this. The average person tends to want to cuddle animals and think that's the answer, which would be nice, but it's not the way it is. If someone went into that water who was not experienced with dolphin handling could very well have been seriously injured or killed by the dolphin, and in the process of injuring the good samaritan with a tail smash to the spleen, the dolphin would have been very capable of injuring itself. I am surprised the police are getting such a bad rap here. Police are trained to deal with humans -- not marine mammals. Look up this word - anthropomorphism.
deb rinaldo January 29, 2013 at 04:19 am
I'm sorry, but I still think that a tranquilizer dart might have calmed the dolphin down & kept it from struggling. They were monitoring its breathing & surely, without touching it, could have hit it easily with a dart. If a lion, bear, or other wild animal without being restrained in place, can be brought down with a tranquilizer gun, to be humanely transported or put out of its misery, why not this distressed, trapped dolphin? Will some expert marine biologist explain to those of us who are confused by this dolphin's death, why this tactic was not employed. I've rescued strays my entire life, not marine or wild animals, but I frequently watch rescue shows on & watch sea world employees, activists, Jack Hanna, & various rescue groups manage to get through the red tape, contact the right sources who want to save an animal, & get it accomplished. All I read on here are excuses, about what the law says, how so many animals die every minute, why no one wanted to get in that human polluted water, but most of all, why it was so dangerous to get near the animal, but better to watch him struggle for days, then succumb & die. If he was already suffering, why not ease it? Would someone tell me why other situations have been successful, but this one ended in a dolphin's death. More tragic, the very intelligent, trusting dolphin that's used by our Navy, resorts & parks for our own means & amusement. We use them so much for our selfish needs, but we couldn't save this one. Why?
Damien January 29, 2013 at 10:14 am
There we go again, thinking this was one of Flipper's Adventures. Dolphins are intlligent but to say that a marine mammal in the wild is "trusting" is incorrect. It's like saying a wolf stranded on an ice pack on the St. Lawrence Seaway would appreciate the help of a human. Do you see the analogy? This was not a trained dolphin who'd had any contact with humans. Something was mortally wrong with this animal and his death was inevitable. It's very sad, but nature is cruel to all of its creatures -- far crueler than any human bein could imagine. I am amazed at how everyone is up in arms without the facts, and accusing the police and the government and whoever of some grand conspiracy to hurt this animal. Decisions were made by experts based on their observations. Do you think that anyone who has dedicated their lives to learning about marine mammals would be so cruel to simply sit back and watch this animal die? Do you think that a NYC Policeman has any less compassion for it than you? Of corse not. I have to emphasize a few things. The animal was sick and dying. He didn't get "stuck" -- he was trying to strand himself but could not do so because the structure of the canal would not let him. The necropsy will show that this dolphin was either very old or very sick, or both. The fact that he/she was in the canal in the first place and behaving strangely is all the evidence a marine biologist really needed. It's sad but he did what dolphins do when death is near
Damien January 29, 2013 at 10:31 am
The results of the "autopsy" and the results were just as I predicted. The animal was dying of old age and a host of other serious and incurable illnesses -- the worst one being that he was very very old. I was just emailed a copy of the necropsy ( that's what you call an autopsy on an animal) and the dolphin was seriously old and sick with no sign of anything in the canal causing it to die. It was also determined, like I said, that the dolphin was trying to beach or "strand" himself but the walls of the canal make that impossible. Why would he want to strand himself? Because slowly dying in the ocean is a whole lot nastier and marine mammals instinctively know this. He would have drifted for days and been slowly eaten aalive by opportunistic sea creatures like sharks, crabs and other types of marine life. I hope somebody learned something from my postings and the name calling will stop. I have dedictaed and sacrificed my life for these marine mammals and do you think for one moment I would sit idylly by like some inky little coward and watch it die if there were another option? What people sense as a kind of cruelty to what I told you all along is actually a deep compassion for this animal who lived a long happy and free life. You should worry more about the captive dolphins who perform for you when you go to Orlando or Atlantis. It's all cute and cuddly until you have to stand back and watch the grim reality of nature.
Ladydi69126 January 29, 2013 at 04:36 pm
Asa friend told me, by law unless the dolphin beached itself their hands were tied due to a federal law. I was upset myself the poor thing got disoriented and wound up in all places that toxic muck but the truth is their was nothing the police could have done to save him.
Patti January 30, 2013 at 02:44 pm
I hope you feel better now Damien that you are trying to convince people you are right. A bit hubris on your part.
Vangeline Gand January 31, 2013 at 05:38 am
The Gowanus canal is man made, and its high level of toxicity and pollution is due to us.
We need to have a protocol in place for rapid rescue to help these large mammals swim back to the bay when they get trapped. No large mammal should ever die trapped in the Gowanus canal. We have a moral responsibility to have a protocol of rapid rescue in place, and we need our local officials to explore every option to prevent future deaths, How can the RIverhead Foundation can say in the same breath that the water was not toxic enough to kill the dolphin but too dangerously polluted for human beings to go in? I think they are covering their bad decision. You can do something about this and sign my petition here on sign.org:" rapid rescue of dolphins and whales in Gowanus canal". 150 people have already signed.
idontwantastupidpatchaccount January 31, 2013 at 11:42 am
Damien, yes, I am operating from an informed position. I rescue animals for a living, and have been doing so for 20 yrs. And yes, had I been there I would have intervened to assist the innocent, suffering dolphin. At the very least, someone should have had enough compassion to shoot it and put it out of its misery rather than gawking and photographing it as it died a slow, tortured, painful death. Mr. zoologist, what is the use of all of your education??? Yes, I think you are worthless for a reason.
Damien February 1, 2013 at 09:58 am
It's not hubris -- it's science! I am usually "right" and when I have to use my knowledge to get through om pretty dense skulls, I will gladly enjoy sharing my right-ness.
Damien February 1, 2013 at 10:10 am
Vangeline -- how do you prevent future deaths of dolphins who die from the complications of old age? Do you know som magical way to hold back time or something? THE ANIMAL WAS TERMINALLY ILL ! That is why he ended up in he canal in the first place. The chance of another dolphin -- sick or otherwise --ever again venturing into that canal is zero. Again, you need TO READ and COMPREHEND! The experts on hand knew the score. This is what they do. They knew the dolphin was doomed and the hope was that it would die quickly or swim out of sight and then die. You have dingbats on here who think that finding lost cats and dog makes them animal rescue experts.
Damien February 1, 2013 at 10:14 am
Rescuing animals "for a living" has nothing to do with the science of marine biology and the protocols attached to a very sensitive marine science issue. Hey, you can run around catching dogs with nets and declare yourself to be the town dog catcher --but who cares? The truth is that your sentiments and dopey comments were rooted in sentimentality and ignorance. I honestly believe that even though the proof has been shoved right under your nose, you will never be able to undertand the scientific process and the basic protocols inherent to any kind of zoologocal rescue. The dolphin died from geriatric (old age) complications, but you migt want to see if yo have toxic chemicals in your brain -- after all -- you do live awfully close to that canal. Remember,there are two kinds of animal rescue people - those who want to help animals and those who simply want to crucify human beings. You fall into the second group. READ THIS: http://thedamienzone.com/2013/01/29/autopsy-results-of-gowanus-canal-dead-dolphin-show-the-truth/

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