Baltimore Sun Sunday

More dolphins finding way to Chesapeake Bay

Researcher­s are surprised by numbers they are seeing

- By Tim Prudente By Justin Fenton and Kevin Rector

death of popular local rapper Lor Scoota — riddled with bullets in the front seat of his Gray Honda Accord as he left an anti-violence event at Morgan State University last June — transfixed his friends and fans in Baltimore and beyond.

Little noticed at the time was another shooting across town a few hours earlier. Investigat­ors now say that it was that shooting that set the brazen attack on Scoota into motion.

Authoritie­s say Scoota’s alleged killer, Cortez Mitchell, targeted the rapper because a friend of Scoota’s had shot a friend of Mitchell’s.

In that way, they say, it was another retaliatio­n killing of the sort that has helped drive the historic spike in violence now seizing the city.

It was also an example of how the crude system of street justice can move laterally, striking not just perpetrato­rs, but also family and friends. Supporters say Scoota had largely turned away from street life in order to pursue a promising career in music.

He still wound up in the crosshairs.

“It’s like the old saying: If I can’t get you, I’ll get someone close to you,” said Detective Curtis McMillion, who investigat­ed the case. “That’s just the way the streets is.”

Scoota’s friend, Fred Catchings, is scheduled to go on trial this week on charges of attempted murder. He has pleaded not guilty. His attorney declined to comment.

Mitchell, who police say killed Scoota, was himself shot to death in his car four months later — more retaliatio­n, authoritie­s believe.

The sequence is outlined in court filings in Catchings’ attempted murThe

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Maryland Natural Resources Police Sgt. John Buchanan was flying biologists over Tangier Sound this spring to survey ducks when he glimpsed gray bodies arcing in the waters below.

The veteran pilot lowered the helicopter for a closer look.

Two, three, four pods of dolphins. He counted almost 50 of the mammals in the lower Chesapeake Bay.

“One of the largest groups that I’ve seen,” Buchanan said. “Over the last few years it’s not uncommon to see them.”

Now researcher­s in Maryland and Virginia are undertakin­g the first comprehens­ive studies of bottlenose dolphins in the Chesapeake Bay. Their early findings suggest more dolphins are swimming up into the bay — they have been spotted as far north as Annapolis and the Bay Bridge — than previously believed.

“We may have well over 1,000 dolphins coming into the bay, which is far more than I think anyone expected,” said Helen Bailey,

a research professor with the University of Maryland Center for Environmen­tal Science.

When Bailey dropped an underwater microphone off the pier at the Chesapeake Biological Laboratory on Solomons Island last June, she heard dolphin squeaks, clacks and whistles. As the mammals cruised past, she wondered: Where are they going?

Bailey hopes for clues with the release this month of a new cellphone app that will enable bay users to report dolphin sightings. Her DolphinWat­ch app will mark locations, dates and times of sightings and plot them on a map of the bay.

Bailey plans to use the data to determine where to deploy more underwater microphone­s. One device has recorded dolphins near the mouth of the Potomac River every day for the past two weeks.

“They’re obviously going somewhere to feed, and I don’t think it’s at the mouth,” she said. “I just don’t know where it is.”

Bottlenose dolphins can grow to 12 feet long, weigh 1,400 pounds and swim 22 mph. The females may live half a century. Sightings start in April and end in October.

Acrobatic and clever, dolphins live in all but the coldest ocean waters — in different places they develop different behaviors. Those near Hawaii earned the name “spinners” for their aerial pirouettes. Off the Florida Keys, they’ve learned to churn up the sea floor and corral prey with mud plumes. On the floor of Shark Bay, Australia, they don sea sponges to guard their snouts when foraging. And the Chesapeake dolphins? “We know almost nothing,” said Eric Patterson, a biologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. “We don’t even really know what population or stock they belong to.”

A handful of distinct population­s swim along the East Coast in a migration route that extends from New York to Florida. Together, NOAA researcher­s estimate, these groups exceed 14,000 dolphins.

Biologists suspect some of the dolphins — perhaps enticed by rockfish and croaker — have taken to summering in the Chesapeake Bay. They don’t know if the gray guests have a taste for blue crabs.

“We think it is actually a really important feeding area,” said Janet Mann, a biology professor at Georgetown University. “They’re getting pregnant here and they’re having babies here.”

In fact, researcher­s have found denser pods in the lower Chesapeake than off Western Australia, Patterson said.

The growing awareness of Chesapeake Bay dolphins began by happenstan­ce.

Mann and her husband bought a cottage five years ago on the Potomac and discovered their new aquatic neighbors. She bought an 18-foot boat and began taking pictures.

She has identified more than 500 dolphins around the mouth of the Potomac in the past two summers. She names them after presidents, first ladies, Founding Fathers, even Supreme Court justices. Her first was Benjamin Franklin; she named a mother and calf Barbara and Jeb Bush.

Mann calls it the Potomac-Chesapeake Dolphin Project. She photograph­s the mammals’ dorsal fins, distinct as fingerprin­ts, with various nicks, scars and coloring, and sends the images to Duke University, which maintains a database with thousands of such photos.

About a third of the dolphins she identified in 2015 returned the next summer.

Bailey, hired by state and federal officials last year to study the waters off Ocean City where developers want to erect wind turbines, placed underwater microphone­s and published her results last month.

She reported dolphins visit the two sites proposed for the turbines mostly in winter and spring, and recommende­d constructi­on of the turbines be delayed until summer to reduce the impact on dolphins.

Bailey partnered with Mann and placed a microphone in the Potomac. As their research progressed, they heard more and more dolphin tales.

“Either people are more aware, or there are more dolphins,” Mann said.

Bailey wonders if some condition is changing behavior of dolphins migrating along the Atlantic Coast.

“One of the problems is a lot of the informatio­n is anecdotal,” she said. “We’re only just starting to systematic­ally report sightings.

“We’re probably seeing an increase, and it may have to do with changes in the water.”

Brent Whitaker tracks wildlife data at the National Aquarium in Baltimore. He says the bay is growing increasing­ly temperate.

“We’re seeing seals coming down farther south and dolphins coming up from the south,” he said. “As water temperatur­e changes and food stocks move, I think that’s why we’re seeing changes in the animals.”

Occasional dolphin sightings in the bay have been reported for centuries. An 1800s account tells of one dolphin swimming up the Potomac to Washington. There have been recent sightings as far upriver as the Gov. Harry W. Nice Memorial Bridge, which carries Route 301 over the Potomac from Charles County to Virginia.

Buchanan, the pilot, says he has seen dolphins near Kent Island and in the Choptank and Miles rivers on the Eastern Shore. Anne Arundel County families were surprised last July when dolphins swam through the Severn, South, West and Rhode rivers. Some two dozen were glimpsed off the Naval Academy sea wall in Annapolis.

Amanda Weschler investigat­es dead dolphins and sea turtles for the Maryland Department of Natural Resources. She says she’s heard of dolphins spotted north of the Bay Bridge near Pasadena.

“The general public is not aware of the number that we see every year,” she said.

Chesapeake dolphins drew attention four years ago when the carcasses of nearly 80 washed up on Maryland shores. Dolphins were found with lesions on their skin, mouths and lungs around the Atlantic Coast. NOAA investigat­ors counted about 1,800 deaths between 2013 and 2015, six times more than the previous five years combined. They suspect a contagious virus similar to measles.

Bailey and Mann aim to understand such threats while solving the lingering mysteries of the Chesapeake dolphins. Graduate student Ann-Marie Jacoby studied with Mann at Georgetown. She plans to begin her own project traveling along the Potomac to collect accounts of dolphin sightings.

“Nobody has really studied the dolphins until now,” Jacoby said. “There’s a ton of questions that can be answered, which is really exciting.”

Bailey plans to launch the DolphinWat­ch app in the last week of June. She is raising money for 10 more battery-powered hydrophone­s — each costs about $3,000 — to deploy across the bay. And Mann will continue photograph­ing dolphins this summer. Both hope to publish their results.

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SUN INVESTIGAT­ES
 ??  ?? Researcher­s are studying bottlenose dolphins in the Chesapeake Bay and have found denser pods in the lower bay than off the coast of Western Australia.
Researcher­s are studying bottlenose dolphins in the Chesapeake Bay and have found denser pods in the lower bay than off the coast of Western Australia.

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