ABC NEWS
by M.L. Nestel, 9/8/07
When
Hurricane Irma finally dissipates, the damage wrought by the storm won't only
affect people.
The
Category 4 storm, which ravaged the Caribbean and is expected pummel Florida
this weekend, displaced and devastated habitats and various species including
turtles, parrots and iguanas, multiple experts and a federal government
official told ABC News.
And as
vulnerable southern Florida residents heed Gov. Rick Scott's plea to flee
Hurricane's Irma's ire, a record high 19,000 turtle nests laid this year along
an almost 10-mile stretch of beach may not survive Irma's powerful winds and
surging tides.
The
storm's threat caused one turtle hospital in Florida to move all of their
patients.
By
Thursday evening, 40 or so turtle hatchlings and 10 wounded fully grown and
young adult sea green, loggerhead and leatherback turtles were transported from
the Loggerhead Marine Life Center in Juno
Beach for a sojourn at the ritzy Georgia Aquarium.
"We
made the decision to take all of those turtles to the Georgia Aquarium where
they will still be getting the critical care they need," Hannah Deadman, a
spokeswoman for the center, told ABC News.
The move
was a departure from last year's safety measure for Hurricane Matthew, which
was to dry-dock the turtles.
"There's
just more in store with Irma," Deadman said.
The
turtles, many of whom were saved from ghost nets or boat strikes, or suffer
from chronic debilitation syndrome (CDS) -- the turtle equivalent of the flu --
will be enjoying new digs.
The
future is much more dismal for the thousands of turtles nesting along beaches
running from northern Palm Beach line through John D. MacArthur Park.
"Some
of those nests, especially those closest to the water will get washed
out," Deadman said. "The eggs can get scattered and that leaves them
not viable.”
All of
them, be it sea green, loggerhead or leatherback, are already left to fend for
themselves, Deadman said, because after a female lays her eggs she returns back
to the ocean.
Normally,
that would mean fending off being hunted by fire ants, racoons, crabs and sea
birds, not a massive storm.
The
silver lining, Deadman said, is that the nesting season's peak has already come
and gone.
"Since
we're outside peak nesting season, we’re not going to have as much loss as if
the hurricane came in July," she said.
The
disruption in the turtle population around Florida is cause for concern but
also some hope too.
"That's
the thing about nature, it always has a way of working itself out," Jeff
Fleming, of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Southeast Region, told ABC
News.
Fleming
marveled at the turtles who hatch and nest along a Florida beach, and after
decades roaming the globe, return back to their birthplace.
"They're
pretty doggone smart," he said.
Hurricanes
are common enough in Florida, meaning these creatures adapt, Fleming said.
"What
they do is hedge their bets," he said. "Even if a storm hits at some
juncture during the nesting season some of those will incubate successfully.”
He added:
"No storm season is a total loss.”
Perhaps
most troublesome, Fleming said, is the effects Irma may cause to the habitats
of the regions hit the hardest.
"Beaches
could be eroded; depending on the turn of the storm, marshes can be damaged
because a nasty hurricane you can get a lot of saltwater," he said.
Already,
Irma is responsible for causing authorities in Puerto Rico to protect
endangered parrots who live in the El Yunque National Forest on the main
island's eastern edge, according to a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service release.
"We’ve
already been doing a lot for parrots," Fleming said of the parrots who
were sheltered inside of a hurricane-proof aviary built a decade ago.
Still,
the effects of Irma on the wild parrot population have yet to be assessed.
"But
birds generally have the wherewithal to move out of harm's way," Fleming
said.
However,
the storm's lethal effects have left apparently left a "critically
endangered" species of iguana in question.
There are
only around 500 Anegada iguanas -- named after the British Virgin Island Anegada
-- left, and a facility to transition newborns into the wild took a beating,
according to conservation biologist Kelly Bradley of the Fort Worth Zoo in
Texas.
She said
the small island benefits greatly from these animals whose numbers dwindled to
the hundreds after being killed by invasive predators like cats.
"They're
really important parts of this ecosystem," she said. "The plant
community will suffer if that iguana species is lost to this hurricane.”
The
endangered plant black sage is specifically at risk.
"They're
major seed dispersers and replant the forest," she said.
They do
this by swallowing leaves and berries whole and regurgitating them.
"Seeds
that go through iguana gut germinate faster and have a higher survivorship as a
seedling," she said.
Her Fort
Worth Zoo colleague Diane Barber said Irma isn't all that bad when it comes to
some animals.
"I
kind of feel a little guilty being excited there was a hurricane," she
said, noting that the heavy tropical depressions caused by Irma drive the Puerto
Rican crested toad to procreate.
The
population today stands at 3,000.
But only
years ago the species had dwindled to a few hundred.
They
thrive on the U.S. island territory but to keep the population flourishing, the
toads' eggs are incubated at 19 zoos on the mainland.
And when
a hurricane or tropical storm form, Puerto Rican crested toads are the
benefactors.
"They're
explosive breeders," Barber said.
With
enough rain, ponds will form and the males will go searching for mates.
"With
just 3 inches of rain they sense it and they will migrate over to the water
about 3 miles away and breed," she said.
That
isn't to say the catastrophic storm conditions won't do extensive damage to
these creatures.
"If
there's massive waves or tidal surges, these toads need to breathe through
their skin, and salt prevents them from doing that," Barber said.
"They're so close to the beach that if the storm surges it will kill many
of the tadpoles.”
Meanwhile,
for animals in captivity Hurricane Irma will change up their routines.
John
Brueggen, who runs the St. Augustine Alligator Farm in St. Augustine, Florida,
said his staff is rounding up every bird and monkey into closed spaces.
As for eenomous snakes, told ABC affiliate WJXX "they all go in a pillow case
that’s tied or zipped shut. They can breathe fine. It’s a dark place, calms
them down," he said. "Then they go in a locked box, like a tool box
with air holes.
"And
they stay inside a super strong building … like they did during Hurricane
Matthew.”
If water breaches
his farm's fences, the alligators, Brueggen said, "may go with the water.
"But
we’ve been here 125 years and we’ve never had that problem," he said.
"So knock on wood, we won’t have it again this time."
At the
Central Florida Zoo, animals are being fit into crates and "nighttime
quarters," director Dino Ferri told ABC News.
He said a
team of three zoo staffers will be sleeping on the zoo grounds when Hurricane
Irma strikes.
"As
soon as it passes we go out in three-man teams to assess," he said.
The
biggest threat Ferri cited beyond water intrusion is if a tree falls on a
structure.
"There's
only so much we can do," he said.
But he's
confident the zoo's block concrete buildings will hold up against Hurricane
Irma.
"It
will take an act of God to knock them down.”
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