Orlando Sentinel

Records: Scramble to respond as sawfish deaths mounted

- By Jenny Staletovic­h

As dead sawfish began washing up on shores in the Lower Keys this winter, researcher­s and wildlife officers raced to respond to the mounting number of endangered fish thrashing on beaches, circling around flats and uncharacte­ristically jerking their toothy rostrums out of the water.

One was spotted near Marathon, in a channel used for a James Bond movie scene. The same day another appeared miles away, south of the Key West Airport, then even further away, in the remote Mule Keys.

On social media, pictures from the Southernmo­st Point competed with videos of smalltooth sawfish pitching onto beaches and swimming into seawalls near the popular tourist town. Then late last week, videos posted on YouTube looked showed a large sawfish swinging its rostrum out of the water in the Boynton Inlet, looking eerily similar to images from the Keys.

Altogether, the trail of sick or dead sawfish in the Keys stretched across 78 miles of shallow water, from Boca Grande to Long Key State Park, according to records released to WLRN for the period from Jan. 30 to March 5. By mid February, records show reports began flooding the hotline, sometimes up to six a day.

“I’ve lived in the Keys my entire life. I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Republican state Rep. Jim Mooney, a former teacher, real estate agent and mayor of Islamorada elected to the Florida Legislatur­e four years ago. “There’s usually some kind of relatively easy fact behind when they start to get stressed. But this is an anomaly.

Mooney convinced lawmakers this month to set aside $2 million in emergency funding to try to unravel the mystery that’s also stressing, and sometimes killing, dozens of other species of fish.

“You got to ask yourself, is this something to do with last summer’s heat that has some kind of offshoot that we haven’t seen before?” he said. Sawfish “are basically a dinosaur, so they have survived some very harsh conditions over the course of their life on Earth. And for them to be flounderin­g and dying is super concerning.”

The dead sawfish capped a simmering, but mostly out of sight event that started in November, months after an extreme ocean heat wave swept across South Florida and spiked inshore water temperatur­es by 5 degrees on average. Days of sizzling temperatur­es bleached coral throughout the Keys and baked other important life: jellyfish also bleached, sponges died and spongy mats of halimeda, a plentiful macro algae, wilted.

Alarmed fishing guides and anglers reported seeing fish behaving strangely. Many circled and seemed to struggle to maintain their equilibriu­m. Whatever was ailing them appeared to be indiscrimi­nate, afflicting species as small as minnows and pinfish, as well as sturdier snook, tarpon and Goliath grouper. The Lower Keys Guides Associatio­n reached out to the Bonefish Tarpon Trust, which organized a team of researcher­s and state wildlife biologists the second week of January to begin studying the escalating event.

Then in late January, the first sawfish turned up dead, deepening the mystery.

“Given how rare sawfish are, and there are a lot of other big animals out there and they’re not turning up on the beaches in the shallows,” said Dean Grubbs, a Florida State University coastal fish ecologist who studies sharks and sawfish and is a member of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s sawfish recovery team. “It’s mostly the sawfish.”

Nearly all the dead sawfish have had necropsies performed by Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission’s sawfish research program based at its Charlotte Harbor Field Laboratory. Lead scientist Gregg Poulakis, who has referred questions to FWC media staff, has been investigat­ing the fish for more than a decade.

“They’re going to open them up and start looking into their internal organs,” Grubbs said. “You might look at their digestive tract. You might look at the liver, gallbladde­r and kidneys. Do they look normal? Maybe you’ll take bile from the gallbladde­r. Those are your filtration organs so those are the ones that are going to filter any toxins.”

They’ll also likely take blood samples. Blood he collected from 11 apparently healthy sawfish in February are being used as comparison, Grubbs said. Older samples from about 100 sawfish tagged and examined over the years will also be provided by biologist Jim Gelsleicht­er at the University of North Florida, Grubbs said, which contain blood and genetic material used to examine reproducti­on and eating habits.

“We don’t have a lot of other samples available, so they’re using whatever is available, which is mostly going to be blood plasma,” he said.

Meanwhile, a separate pathology team is continuing to work to identify the toxin making other species sick.

Fish have tested positive for multiple toxins, including a toxin found in ciguatera that they initially thought might be the cause. But the appearance of other toxins has complicate­d that theory and so far no smoking gun has emerged, Florida Gulf Coast University algae expert Mike Parsons said Friday. His team has not received samples from the dead sawfish, but he said results of necropsies would not necessaril­y shed light on toxins identified by pathologis­ts.

State researcher­s began monitoring them in the 1990s, even before sawfish were added to the endangered species list in 2003, so have the best expertise, Grubbs said. But the number of experts in the field is still small. Only five species of sawfish exist around the globe and the only sawfish in the U.S. are only reliably found in South Florida.

“There are only a limited number of people that are even permitted to work with them,” he said. “Within FWC, there’s not very many people that work on sawfish and have never looked inside of a sawfish. So it is a pretty small group. So yeah, they’re up to their elbows.”

First findings in January

Since January, when the first dead sawfish was found near a marina on Geiger Key, they’ve been scrambling, records show. The following two weeks, five dead female sawfish turned up dead between Cudjoe Key and Key West.

Numbers jumped the following week, records show. Four more were found dead and another six thrashing or stranded in shallow waters in a widening circle, as far south as the Mule Keys and north to Big Pine and the toney Little Palm Island resort. Seven more were found on Feb. 22 alone.

In late February and early March, numbers and locations mounted: a resident filmed one swimming onto rocks at the White Street pier in Key West. A caller on Boca Chica saw what appeared to be a dead sawfish on rocks, but when they freed its rostrum, the fish swam away. At Bahia Honda, a caller reported a sawfish stranded on the beach. Later, it approached kayakers in deeper water. Dead sawfish were found at faraway Boca Grande and in Shark Channel.

For each report, FWC officers, and staff from the Sawfish Research Program in Charlotte Harbor or the Fish and Wildlife Research Institute in Marathon scrambled to respond, records show. Sometimes they got help from staff at the old SeaCamp science center in Big Pine or researcher­s from the Bimini Biological Field Station working in the area.

Dead sawfish were usually taken to the Charlotte Harbor field station to be necropsied. When they could, researcher­s tagged sawfish that were still alive and pushed them into deeper water. Some bore tags, although none were fish tagged previously be Grubbs.

Other than being mostly large, adult sawfish, Grubbs said no clear patterns are evident. Both male and female are among the dead. And while most were spotted on the Atlantic side, he said that could be a factor of observatio­nal bias: the back country has more mangroves where fish can hide and fewer people are watching.

Recent video from the Boynton Inlet is troubling, he said.

“I don’t know if that’s the same thing happening or not,” he said. “But if it is and it’s and it’s moving north, that’s even more of a concern.”

Anyone who sees unusual fish or sawfish behavior should report it to authoritie­s, Grubbs said. Those reports will help scientists understand how far things have spread, or if they’re continuing.

Sawfish informatio­n should be reported to FWC’s Sawfish Hotline at 844-4729374, 1844-4SAWFISH, or by email to Sawfish@myfwc. com. Other fish should be reported to FWC’s Fish Kill Hotline at 800-636-0511 or online at MyFWC.com/ ReportFish­Kill.

This story was produced in partnershi­p with the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a multi-newsroom initiative founded by the Miami Herald, the South Florida Sun Sentinel, The Palm Beach Post, the Orlando Sentinel, WLRN Public Media and the Tampa Bay Times.

 ?? JAMIE MAE DARROW/FLORIDA WILDLIFE RESEARCH INSTITUTE ?? A smalltooth sawfish found off South Florida by researcher­s with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute in 2016.
JAMIE MAE DARROW/FLORIDA WILDLIFE RESEARCH INSTITUTE A smalltooth sawfish found off South Florida by researcher­s with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute in 2016.

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