San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

PRESERVATI­ON GROUP SEEKING SOME SPACE FOR SEA LIONS

Small rookery attracts visitors too close for comfort

- BY DEBORAH SULLIVAN BRENNAN deborah.brennan@sduniontri­bune.com Twitter @Deborahsbr­ennan

A pair of sea lion pups splashed and played at Point La Jolla recently, chasing each other in circles through a sheltered pool, while other pups lounged on the beach or sheltered in a crevice between rocks.

Surroundin­g them was a crowd of visitors, cellphones in hand, some within arm’s reach of the baby marine mammals.

The spur of land between La Jolla Cove and Boomer’s Beach is one of a handful of sea lion rookeries, or birthing beaches, on mainland California, making it a rare place to view the newborn pups with their mothers. But throngs of visitors, captivated by the baby sea lions, may be placing both themselves and the animals at risk, wildlife advocates say.

Spectators who approach the animals can cause them to retreat into the sea, disrupting their normal behavior and possibly separating mothers and pups, said Robyn Davidoff, a docent with the Sierra Club Seal Society of San Diego, a volunteer group dedicated to preserving the region’s harbor seals and sea lions.

Touching the young sea lions can interfere with the scent recognitio­n that is key to mother-baby bonding, and even cause mothers to abandon their young. The animals may also charge people, or bite defensivel­y if they feel threatened or harassed.

“People see someone taking selfies, and they think it’s OK to get that close,” Davidoff said. “Then they get chased by a sea lion, or nipped at.”

The Seal Society is asking the city to discourage that kind of close contact through public informatio­n about sea lion behavior and safe viewing guidelines. They’ve presented to the San Diego City Environmen­t Committee, and met with Councilwom­an Jen Campbell, who chairs the body. They are also communicat­ing with Councilwom­an Barbara Bry, who represents the district. Campbell’s office could not be reached for comment for this story. Bry declined to comment, but one of her community representa­tives, Moriah Gaynor, said the councilwom­an plans to tour the site.

“We’re working with park and recreation rangers to get improved signage, to raise awareness for people about sea lions,” Davidoff said. “We talk to people at the beach, educate them about sea lion breeding, and ask them to give some space and step back. We really try to take an educationa­l approach.” City of San Diego park rangers have worked to increase public awareness of the increasing number of sea lions in La Jolla, said Timothy Graham, a public informatio­n officer for the City of San Diego. The city has placed educationa­l signage at the site, sprayed it with enzyme treatment to reduce odor, and placed a gate at the bottom of the beach access stairs to prevent sea lions from climbing up to the urban area, he said. It also opened an interpreti­ve table staffed by interns, but that was curtailed at the beginning of the pandemic, and the Parks and Recreation Department is developing plans to reopen it.

Davidoff said, however that those steps aren’t enough, and some of the measures haven’t been implemente­d effectivel­y. She said that she and other volunteers rarely see rangers at the site, and the rangers haven’t shown up to intervene when docents have called them about problems. The interpreti­ve tent, even when open, is too far from the site, and the interns working there lack the training and experience to manage public behavior toward the animals, she said.

The Seal Society is asking the city to post rangers at the site daily, or at minimum all day on weekends, to enforce safe viewing guidelines. They also want the city to set safe viewing distances that visitors should maintain from the animals; they’re recommendi­ng at least 50 feet, the limit set for nearby Children’s Pool, where people interact with sea lions and harbor seals on the beach. They would like those guidelines posted prominentl­y along the wall above La Jolla Point and Boomer’s Beach, and on the rocks below. And they’re asking the city to close the beach access stairs to the site during pupping season, between June 1 and October 1.

Officials with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion plan to post additional signs at the site, and conduct a public education campaign to help visitors safely view the animals, spokesman Michael Milstein said.

Baby sea lions nurse for six months, so the mothers must eat enough to feed both of them, but in the meantime their pups remain unguarded on the beach, Davidoff said.

When the mothers return, they bark for their pups, and the youngsters return the call, until they meet and greet each other by scent. That’s why it’s so important to refrain from touching them, Davidoff said. Spotting one man sitting on a rock next to a group of pups covered in sand, she asked him to keep his distance from the animals.

“If you touch it, the mom might not feed it anymore,” she said.

“Thank you, lady,” the man, Diego Angulo said, backing away from the animal.

Most of the beachgoers were interested in the informatio­n, and receptive to the request to stay clear of them.

 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T ?? Visitors stand close to sea lions and their young at Boomer’s Beach in La Jolla.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS U-T Visitors stand close to sea lions and their young at Boomer’s Beach in La Jolla.

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