A wayward California sea lion sits in the driveway of the Soggy Bottom Farm near Oakville

A wayward California sea lion sits in the driveway of the Soggy Bottom Farm near Oakville

Biologists investigating what killed California sea lion found on Puget Sound farm

  • The Associated Press
  • Friday, April 29, 2016 12:01am
  • News

The Associated Press

OLYMPIA — State biologists are trying to determine what killed a sea lion that was captured and released after it was strangely found in the driveway of a cattle farm about 50 miles from the ocean.

The male California sea lion was released into Puget Sound on April 15 after it apparently swam and waddled its way to the farm, The News Tribune reported.

On Friday, the sea lion was found dead under a bridge in Olympia, ending its unusual journey from the ocean to a small creek and then to Puget Sound.

Dyanna Lambourn, a state Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist, examined the sea lion Sunday and found no immediate cause of death.

Samples from the necropsy were sent out Tuesday to test for possible causes.

Soggy Bottom Farm

The animal’s wayward journey to Soggy Bottom Farm began sometime before April 15.

Farmer Ken Shively found his gate crashed open and the 350-pound animal in his driveway.

He initially thought it was a deer or elk.

The sea lion was about 200 yards from a tributary of the Chehalis River, and roughly 50 miles of river, creek and drainage ditch travel from the coast.

He called the state wildlife officials.

“They didn’t believe us,” Shively told The News Tribune. “They were like, ‘A what? Can you describe that to us?’ ”

Sgt. Bob Weaver, with agency’s enforcement division, said it was the most unusual call he’s gotten in years.

“I’ve dealt with sea lions before but never in a cattle farm,” he said.

Up a creek

He estimates the sea lion traveled about five miles up a creek, which is only a foot deep in some places.

It’s not unusual for a sea lion to travel far up rivers in the pursuit of salmon and other fish.

“The unusual part is that it went up that little creek,” said Steve Jeffries, a Fish and Wildlife research scientist.

Fish and Wildlife personnel corralled the sea lion into a cage on a flatbed trailer, and released it that evening into Puget Sound near DuPont.

“All our cows came running over to see what all the excitement was about,” Shively said.

Lambourn, who examined the sea lion at the farm, found no obvious injuries or illnesses.

The animal weighed between 350 and 400 pounds, just half the normal weight of an adult male sea lion.

Biologists are investigating what role domoic acid, a neurotoxin produced by algae blooms, played in the sea lion’s death.

Domoic acid can affect a sea lion’s neurological functioning and cause seizures.

In California, where all sea lions originate, the population has been hit by low birth rates and high mortality.

Despite challenges sea lions face, Lambourn said the overall population of about 300,000 animals is in good shape.

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