Wednesday, May 7, 2008 - Page updated at 07:48 PM
E-mail article
Print view Share:
Digg
Newsvine
Officials now say sea lions weren't shot to death in Oregon
Associated Press Writer
The six sea lions found dead in traps near a Columbia River dam were apparently not shot to death after all, federal officials said Wednesday, leaving unanswered how the animals died or whether humans killed them.
Federal fisheries spokesman Brian Gorman in Seattle said preliminary results of a necropsy found no evidence of recent gunshot wounds but found shallow puncture wounds in one of the protected animals consistent with sea lion bite marks.
The fisheries department is still trying to determine how the animals died and how the doors to the traps in which they were found had been closed, he said.
Fishermen and American Indian tribes have long complained that the animals gobble up salmon at the base of the Bonneville Dam. Trapped sea lions identified as troublemakers were in the process of being sent to aquariums such as Sea World when the carcasses of the six animals were found over the weekend.
Because the first examination turned up no slugs, investigators had believed the animals were shot at close range with high-powered rifles, the bullets passing through the flesh.
X-rays on Tuesday found metal fragments in soft tissue near the neck of two animals, Gorman said. A metal slug was found in the blubber of one animal. But neither the fragments nor the slug appear to have caused fatal wounds and may have been from old injuries, he said.
The sea lions included two endangered Steller sea lions and one California sea lion pup.
The Humane Society of the United States, which is suing to block the authorized killing or removal of up to 85 animals a year for five years, agreed Tuesday with the federal government and the states of Oregon and Washington to continue a ban on killing and stop the animals' permanent removal until next year.
The move was in part to allow more efforts to go toward investigating what was thought to be shooting of the animals over the weekend.
The agreement allowed the governments to continue removing animals and branding them for identification if they return them to their natural habitat.
Arguments were to have been heard before a panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday.
Under the agreement, a hearing on the sea lions would be expedited, but killing or permanent removal could not take place until then, probably early next year.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 10:26 PM
Palin links resignation to 'higher calling'
Merchant Marine veterans fight for recognition
2 US troops die in attack on base in Afghanistan
Enigmatic choices create a fuzzy future
Countries slow to admit flu epidemic

shopping

events for Saturday, Jul. 4th
- Kuhlman Summer Sale
- Alhambra July Sale
- Seattle Premium Outlets July 4th Summ...
- Evo Independence Sale
editors' picks
More shopping guides- Palin links resignation to 'higher calling'
- Yakima teacher reprimanded for sending 5-year-old student home with bag of feces in backpack
- Plasma and LCD beware; OLED screens ready to go mainstream
- 6 jurors swear a cop's wife swayed panel in Kent civil rights case
- Fire sends service providers scrambling
- Going to Gas Works Park? Good luck
- Fourth of July festivals and fireworks in Seattle, the suburbs and beyond
- Woman accuses Sounders FC player Nate Jaqua of sexual assault, seeks more than $10 million
- More than 1 million seek tix for Jackson memorial
- Rob Johnson's double in 11th powers Mariners past Red Sox, 7-6
- Plasma and LCD beware; OLED screens ready to go mainstream
- Going to Gas Works Park? Good luck
- Liven up Fremont's attempt to break a world record for a 'zombie walk'
- Merchant Marine veterans fight for recognition
- Lynnwood's City Bank gets tighter scrutiny
- Yakima teacher reprimanded for sending 5-year-old student home with bag of feces in backpack
- Retail Report | Pet-supply shops grow while other retailers fade
- Palin links resignation to 'higher calling'
- Fire sends service providers scrambling
- Oregon woman obsessed with rabbits back in jail
