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Officials begin testing mystery gunk linked to bird deaths

By R&D Editors | January 21, 2015

 
              Volunteers Susan Kaveggia, left, and Susan McCarthy wash a male surf scoter at International Bird Rescue, Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2015, in Fairfield, Calif. The death of 100 birds in the San Francisco Bay Area has baffled wildlife officials who say the feathers of the birds were coated with a mysterious substance that looks and feels like rubber cement. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

San Francisco Bay Area officials have begun laboratory tests and necropsies on dead seabirds found coated with a mysterious substance that looks and feels like dirty rubber cement.

More than 125 dead birds have been found along the bay’s shorelines, said Andrew Hughan, spokesman for the California Dept. of Fish and Wildlife.

“We expect that number to go up,” he said.

The goo covers their feathers, and the birds lose their ability to insulate themselves. They eventually freeze to death.

Hughan said the wildlife agency’s preliminary tests show the gray gunk is not a petroleum-based substance or an organic product like vegetable or fish oil. But final results might not come until later this week.

“You can’t rush science,” Hughan said. “It will be what it is, when it is.”

Officials say the substance is not a public health or safety risk to humans.

They are investigating whether it could be polyisobutylene, a sticky, odorless, largely colorless material that killed thousands of seabirds in the United Kingdom in 2013.

Even when the pollutant is identified, it could be longer before officials pinpoint its source.

International Bird Rescue interim executive director Barbara Callahan said Wednesday the Fairfield center has received 315 birds. Nearly 280 are alive and receiving medical care, cleaning and reconditioning, she said.

Baking soda and vinegar is used to loosen the sticky substance before washing it off with dish soap.

The birds—surf scoters, buffleheads and horned grebes—began turning up on a beach Friday.

Since then, volunteers have combed shorelines looking for and trying to catch living birds.

The dead ones were found along the shorelines in Alameda, Foster City, San Leandro and Hayward, east of San Francisco, Hughan said.

“We don’t expect to find any more live birds,” he said.

 

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