Lodi News-Sentinel

Tampa zoo vet accused of killing manatees through malpractic­e

- By Craig Pittman

TAMPA, Fla. — Federal officials are investigat­ing reports that the head veterinari­an at ZooTampa accidental­ly killed at least two manatees with shoddy medical care.

They are also asking questions about “credible reports” that Dr. Ray Ball, head veterinari­an at what was formerly known as the Lowry Park Zoo, performed improper field amputation­s on manatees and gave them experiment­al drugs.

Until the investigat­ion is over, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said in an Oct. 22 letter to the zoo, Ball must “cease all activities involving manatees.” The zoo’s own permit for treating and exhibiting the marine mammals may be in jeopardy, the letter said.

These complaints should come as no surprise to the zoo’s management, according to a veterinari­an who previously worked with Ball at the zoo.

“I and many others have had issues with his style of medical care and extreme negative results that have come with it,” said Jennifer Galbraith, who resigned from the zoo staff this week after 15 years. “We have over the last eight years documented and presented multiple times this informatio­n to the zoo management. At no point has Dr. Ball been held accountabl­e for these actions.”

She said she is far from the first person to resign in protest over Ball’s treatment of animals.

The federal agency’s questions, and Ball’s suspension, come at a particular­ly awkward time for the zoo, which has been caring for injured and ill manatees since 1991. Its David A. Straz, Jr. Manatee Critical Care Center is about to reopen after being shut down for a year for a taxpayerfu­nded $3 million upgrade to the manatee tank’s water filtration system.

As a statewide Red Tide algae crisis has killed nearly 200 manatees this year, the need for the zoo’s manatee care facility is critical.

The zoo did not make Ball available for comment, but zoo senior vice president Larry Killmar said what’s going on is less an investigat­ion and more in the nature of a federal inquiry. He was unable to explain the difference.

Killmar, who also serves as zoo director, denied that Galbraith or any other employee had ever filed a prior complaint about Ball’s medical treatment of animals.

He said he could not comment specifical­ly on the “credible reports” cited in the letter from the Fish and Wildlife Service, except to say that the zoo is now in the process of assembling a panel of experts on veterinary care and manatees to review the complaints.

“We’re in the process of putting that group together now,” Killmar said.

The letter points to four aspects of Ball’s medical treatment that raised questions.

The first involves a treatment called “chest taps.” When manatees are hit by boats, their ribs can break and puncture a lung so they are unable to submerge. A chest tap involves sticking a needle into the manatee’s chest to remove the air and determine the size of the puncture. But the needle can go in too deep and puncture the lung again.

“After chest taps were performed by Dr. Ball,” the federal agency’s letter said, “two manatees died, and the necropsy reports showed perforatio­ns in the lungs from chest taps.”

The second item involves the rescue of wild manatees that had become entangled in fishing line.

“On more than one occasion,” the letter states, “Dr. Ball performed in-field amputation­s of manatees’ flippers, at times without treatment for infection and pain, and at times releasing the manatees with exposed bones.”

The third point looked at drugs Ball used on injured or ailing manatees.

“On more than one occasion,” the letter says, “experiment­al drugs and/or experiment­al methods of administer­ing drugs were used.” He would give combinatio­ns of drugs “for which he did not have or did not use equipment needed for the procedure.”

The final point, the letter said, concerned “the feeding of hay to young/growing manatees or animals that are physically compromise­d.” Hay offers no nutritiona­l value to manatees, which eat aquatic plants. However, it does tend to be cheaper.

 ?? FILE IMAGE/TAMPA BAY TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Workers at the David A. Straz, Jr. Manatee Hospital at Lowry Park Zoo, now ZooTampa, prepare a manatee for return to the wild.
FILE IMAGE/TAMPA BAY TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH Workers at the David A. Straz, Jr. Manatee Hospital at Lowry Park Zoo, now ZooTampa, prepare a manatee for return to the wild.

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