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The Washington Times Online Edition

Authorities to shoo dolphins from rivers

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dolphins swim in the Shrewsbury River, in Sea Bright, N.J., on Tuesday. Wildlife officials are trying to coax the 12 to 14 bottlenose dolphins out to the open waters of Sandy Hook Bay and then the ocean.ASSOCIATED PRESS Dolphins swim in the Shrewsbury River, in Sea Bright, N.J., on Tuesday. Wildlife officials are trying to coax the 12 to 14 bottlenose dolphins out to the open waters of Sandy Hook Bay and then the ocean.

SEA BRIGHT, N.J. | The latest visitors to the New Jersey shore are doing what many tourists do - splashing around in the waves with the children and feasting on seafood.

But they also are getting hassled by the locals, and for that reason, a group of bottlenose dolphins has to go.

Between 12 to 14 dolphins - including at least three calves - have been frolicking in the Shrewsbury and Navesink rivers for the past two weeks, the likely result of a wrong turn inland when following schools of bait fish.

The dolphins have been drawing crowds along the banks of both rivers, not to mention a flotilla of boats and kayaks that has descended on the area to catch a glimpse of them.

Wildlife officials and volunteers worry the dolphins could be injured or killed by heavy boat traffic in the narrow waterways, particularly with July 4th approaching. They’re working on a plan to coax the dolphins out to the open waters of Sandy Hook Bay and then the ocean.

“As beautiful as it is to see them, they don’t belong here,” said Dan Montano of Long Branch, who took his boat out to see the dolphins Tuesday. “It gets crazy here on weekends; the whole area is inundated with boats. I just hope they can get out.”

Capt. Al Della Fave, a state police spokesman, said the force’s marine unit has been trying to keep boaters away from the dolphins until a rescue plan is approved.

“We’re just trying to maintain a perimeter and keep people from getting too close to them,” he said.

Boaters can be fined as much as $25,000 for harming or harassing dolphins.

Wednesday morning, a group of six dolphins splashed, leapt and dove in the middle of the Shrewsbury River, a narrow waterway between Sea Bright and Rumson about 10 miles north of Asbury Park.

Most boaters kept a respectful distance even as they snapped photos, but some seemed oblivious. One powerboat roared directly over the spot where the dolphins had surfaced just seconds earlier; fortunately, the dolphins surfaced a few yards away shortly afterward.

Two kayakers came within about 5 feet of the dolphins several times, paddling off just before a state police boat with flashing lights arrived to shoo away marine traffic.

“It’s kind of exciting to see them out here,” said Marco Dacillo, a host at McLoone’s Rum Runner, a Sea Bright restaurant on the Shrewsbury where the dolphins have repeatedly appeared. “We saw nine of them, and three babies. But there’s a lot of jet skis and boats.”

Kari Martin of the environmental group Clean Ocean Action said the dolphins do not outwardly appear to be stressed.

“They’re swimming together, which is a good sign,” she said. “But they’re not making their way back out to the ocean. There have been several of this species before in the river, not always with good results.”

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