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Authors: DVM Lucy H. Spelman

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While I was suturing, Felicia prepped the next wound; while I was drawing blood for samples, she administered additional antibiotic doses. Close communication and a reliable support team made for a smooth and successful field procedure, despite all that had previously occurred.

We waited as long as possible for Joliami to start waking from the anesthetic, but knew we couldn't take many more chances with such a formidable patient. Felicia removed his breathing tube and we tried to set him in a safe position. We left him covered with the tarp in view of the increasing rain and his lowered body temperature from the anesthesia. Though we'd been working in cramped quarters in the deep, narrow ravine, the location was beneficial for the gorilla's recovery, as there was really only one direction for him to roll and stumble as he tried to regain his equilibrium. Once he was close to fully recovered, most of the team departed, leaving a couple of experienced trackers to verify his complete anesthetic recovery.

Our New Year's Eve celebration was diminished by Graham's situation. Joliami's crushing bite had fortunately not injured any large blood vessels, but the damage to Graham's thigh was painful. Thanks to some strong pain-killers, though, he was quickly able to joke about the episode and to accept my apology for making a bad professional decision in darting Joliami from a dangerous position. Graham was back in the field in a few weeks, with just a slight lingering limp and a nice scar to show for his close call, while the hero of the day earned a new nickname, Super Barabwiriza.

Joliami's recovery was not as easy to monitor. As a lone silverback, no doubt intent on eluding anyone who might dart him again, he was hard to follow. But since he was also injured, his trackers were able to find him on most days and to verify that he was moving around a bit and managing to eat with only a little difficulty. They also observed him licking and cleaning but not chewing his wounds, which was good news to us.

On the sixth day after the intervention, Felicia and I made another visit with Barabwiriza. Joliami doubled back on his own trail and gave us the slip multiple times, which had us all laughing at being outsmarted by a gorilla, but eventually we tracked him back to his former group. This worried us at first, as it was possible he'd suffered his wounds at the hands of his own group members and that returning injured might invite another thorough beating. To our relief, the group members mostly ignored him, except for his younger brother, who greeted him and then spent time inspecting his wounds. We too had a good opportunity to assess them as Joliami sat quietly among his friends and family. His injuries were healing well, and it seemed likely that he would recover most of the use of his hands and go on to lead a normal life.

Unfortunately, no one has been able to verify Joliami's recovery, as he left the group shortly after that visit and hasn't been definitively seen since. We continue to hope that he will eventually turn up as the dominant silverback in a group. He was just approaching his physical prime, and it is common for lone silverbacks to elude observation for many years before starting or taking over their own groups, so we're still optimistic that this story about the big-eared gorilla will have a happy ending.

The flexible model Felicia and I created that day for working together during gorilla interventions went on to serve us well for many years. There were many occasions in which we had to go in separate directions or work on two gorillas in the same group—confirming that there was indeed enough work for two separate veterinarians. We continued to improve our field procedures during the succeeding years and worked together to train in-country veterinarians. No matter what issues we had with apportioning office and administrative work or with the other stresses of living and working in central Africa, we were always able to bring out the best in each other when a gorilla's health was on the line.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Christopher A. Whittier grew up on a small family farm in rural New Hampshire. He received double bachelor's degrees at Brown University, during which time he studied abroad in Tanzania. He also traveled across parts of east and central Africa, visiting many primate field sites. While earning his veterinary degree from Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine, he returned to Tanzania to study the parasites of wild chimpanzees. Fascinated with primates, Dr. Whittier went on to work as relief veterinarian at the Duke Primate Center and began his PhD at North Carolina State University on the molecular diagnostics and epidemiology of diseases in wild gorillas. His graduate work led him back to Africa, this time to Rwanda. He and his wife, Felicia, worked together for several years as regional field veterinarians for the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project. The couple recently returned to the United States, and he is now finishing his dissertation.

Felicia B. Nutter announced when she was four years old that she was going to be a veterinarian, and went on to graduate from Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine in 1993. Always interested in great apes, she studied parasites among chimpanzees, baboons, and humans at Gombe National Park, Tanzania, as a Fulbright fellow. Dr. Nutter returned to the United States for a small animal medicine and surgery internship, residency in zoological medicine (specializing in free-ranging wildlife), and PhD in population medicine, all at North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine. She joined the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project in 2002, where she and Chris worked together for four years. Dr. Nutter became staff veterinarian for The Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, California, in 2007, where she works with individual clinical cases, helps train young veterinarians, and studies health issues that impact the conservation of larger populations and entire species.

The Katrina Dolphins

by Pamela Govett, DVM

T
housands of feet above the ocean, I walked down the double row of blue and white fiberglass boxes lining the inside of the dimly lit DC-8, checking on the sixteen gray fusiform bodies that filled them. The dolphins, suspended in hammocks and resting in temperature-controlled water, seemed to be traveling comfortably. I was relieved. Outfitted in black rubber pants, a blue “Atlantis” T-shirt, and water-proof boots, I looked no different from the other specialists working with me. But they were seasoned veterans. This was my first dolphin transport.

The animals on the plane had quite a history. They had all been owned by the Marine Life Oceanarium, in Gulfport, Mississippi. In one way or another, each had lost its home on August 29, 2005, when Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast. Thanks to the storm alerts, five of the dolphins at the Oceanarium were transferred to local hotel swimming pools to weather the storm. Another eight resident dolphins were placed in the Oceanarium's main pool, which had withstood previous hurricanes.

Unfortunately, the unusually large storm surge severely damaged the facility and swept the dolphins out to sea. Miraculously, all eight were rescued twelve days later by the Navy, and temporarily housed at the Gulfport, Mississippi naval base. The five that had endured the storm in hotel swimming pools found temporary homes at Florida's Gulfarium in Fort Walton Beach. The Oceanarium owned four additional dolphins that were on loan to various other institutions in the Northeast. They had been scheduled to return to Gulfport in the near future, and now they too were homeless.

Just prior to the hurricane, I had accepted a job at Atlantis resort in Nassau, Bahamas, as staff veterinarian. We were in the process of developing a brand-new, state-of-the-art facility for dolphins when Katrina hit. Atlantis offered the dolphins a home and Marine Life Oceanarium agreed. After the initial excitement, I found my new job turning into many late nights spent preparing for the dolphins' arrival. The health and welfare of the Katrina dolphins would soon be my responsibility, and I had to make sure that our facility contained everything they might need.

A top priority was to get to know the dolphins before we moved them to the Bahamas. That way, I'd be aware of their current health status and be able to detect a health problem early on. In the short month available to me before the move date, I visited as many of the aquaria and temporary facilities housing the dolphins as possible. I headed first to the naval base in Mississippi to meet the eight dolphins that had been swept out to sea three months earlier. Unused to fishing for themselves, the dolphins had lost noticeable weight and were in fragile condition at the time of their rescue. With the help of good nutrition and supportive care, they were now improving.

The day I arrived was cold and wet. Steady rain fell on the blue plastic roof of the warehouse where the dolphins had lived since the hurricane. As I stepped inside the shadowy, musty-smelling building, a cheery hello surprised me. The greeting came from one of the civilians employed to make sure the dolphins had clean artificial seawater in which to live. Enveloped in a large gray sweatshirt emblazoned “Navy” and sporting a blond braid down her back, the young woman was huddled by an electric heater. I shivered in my black Gore-Tex jacket and pulled it closer around me.

In a makeshift booth at one side of the vast building, the trainers were putting together the dolphins' meal of capelin and herring. I watched as they stuffed the fish with pills, hiding vitamins and medication deep inside where the dolphins wouldn't notice. Their haggard faces showed the strain of working long hours on behalf of the dolphins, with few days off. I wondered if part of their dedication to these animals was the shared experience of the hurricane; the trainers had lost their homes and belongings to the storm too.

There were two large collapsible pools in one corner of the warehouse, similar in size to the average backyard swimming pool. When the trainers approached the first pool, four surprisingly healthy-looking dolphins raised their heads out of the foamy water littered with play toys like hula hoops, plastic bats, and balls; they were eager for their next meal. Another four heads emerged for their fish in the second pool. The trainers introduced me to each one: Toni, Kelly, Tamra, Jill, Elijah, Noah, Jackie, and Michelle.

Though the warehouse itself felt gloomy, I could see the dolphins were well taken care of. I also knew they had a bright future. No expense had been spared during construction of their new home in Nassau, and the location was ideal—a lovely, warm vacation destination. The Atlantis facility included an acclimation habitat built on an intercoastal waterway and an inland permanent habitat. Each offered spacious open-water bedrooms and even larger interactive play areas. Water quality had been checked for the past year, and plans called for continued checks four times a week. Local fish schooled throughout the habitat, adding interest to the natural bottom that was meticulously scanned by snorkelers and divers to ensure that it was free of harmful debris.

The medical monitoring equipment was superior to that of most local hospitals. Blood samples could be analyzed in five minutes. Digital images of microscopic cells could be shared instantly with specialists hundreds of miles away. A hood and incubator had been installed so that the laboratory could perform its own microbiology work. An ultrasound unit the size of a waffle maker could be taken dockside to monitor pregnancies. The pharmacy contained all the medications the dolphins could ever need. The management plan focused on prevention: respirations, appetite, and attitude would be monitored daily, blood work and blowhole excretions routinely.

When I left the Mississippi warehouse that day, I felt bad for the trainers. They would certainly miss these friendly and intelligent animals with whom they had developed such special bonds. With the departure of the dolphins, they would also have to find new jobs.

The next week, I flew to Florida to meet five more of the dolphins. I was able to spend two weeks with this group, and felt as though I got to know them well. There were two lively adolescents, Jonah and Brewer; a mother-and-daughter pair, Cherie and Katelyn; and an older female, Tessie. The trainers often played football and chase with Jonah and Katelyn after meals and daily exercises, and I jumped at the chance to join in. Assuming a more veterinary role, I examined the animals as they went through their husbandry routines. I consulted with the veterinarians who were in charge of their care at the time and pored over their medical records. I also helped prepare the transport containers.

Though I struggled not to show preference, Jonah quickly became my favorite. His upturned nose gave him a permanent cartoonish smile, and his impish ways and eagerness to interact with me, as well as with the other dolphins, made him irresistible. Brewer, a few years older than Jonah, had an entirely different personality, dutiful and eager to please. As for the females, the mother-and-daughter pair could not have been more different from each other. Sweet, graceful, and beautiful, Katelyn was endearing. Her mother, Cherie, had a devilish side.

Tessie was another story. Stricken by a rare fungal disease since the hurricane, she'd been fighting for her life. Only one other dolphin had been known to survive this type of infection, narrowly escaping death with the help of a new medication imported from Europe. During my brief visit in Florida, Tessie's condition had stabilized on this new medicine, but it was a struggle. The dedicated veterinary staff and trainers spent long hours coaxing Tessie to eat and accept her treatments. Fortunately, the fungus was not contagious to the other dolphins. Tessie was, technically, the seventeenth Katrina dolphin. Sadly, she was too ill to join the other sixteen on the flight to Nassau.

Two days before our flight to Nassau, I met the other four dolphins for the first time. I'd flown north to the National Aquarium in Baltimore to meet two males, Echo and Wee Tee, and participate in their move by truck to the airport. I'd spent only a short amount of time with this pair, but had been impressed by their alertness. Always on the lookout, ignoring each other but acutely aware of anything out of the ordinary, they would have made great espionage agents. Fortunate to have missed the hurricane, they'd been on loan to a Philadelphia aquarium when the storm hit; recently, they'd been moved to Baltimore.

The next day, I met the final two dolphins, Naia and Sasha, just as they were readied to board the plane. They'd been living at a New Jersey facility at the time of the hurricane. Since I'd had no chance to get to know them, I planned to spend extra time with them once we settled in at the new facility.

It had been a strenuous month for me, to put it mildly. In preparation for the move, I'd gone over every possible scenario in my mind. It's rare to transport so many dolphins at once, and a lot could go wrong. The animals might thrash around in their transport units, or breathe too rapidly due to stress. I was prepared to sedate them, but only if necessary.

The first step of the transport hadn't started off well at all. In Baltimore, Wee Tee and Echo were due to be moved onto a truck in late afternoon in preparation for the journey to the Philadelphia airport. Our trip out of Baltimore and into Philly had been carefully scheduled to occur at night, to avoid high traffic both on the streets and at the airport. But the pump in the dolphins' pool malfunctioned; we were unable to lower the water enough so that we could glide the dolphins into their transport hammocks. Eventually, the maintenance staff fixed the problem, but the delay threatened to disrupt our precise schedule.

With the pool drained, I watched anxiously as the trainers positioned Echo into his hammock first, followed by Wee Tee. A pulley system lifted both hammocks out of the pool and a digital scale measured their weights: 450 pounds for Echo and 400 for Wee Tee. The dolphins appeared calm, though they must have been acutely aware that everything around them was changing. Once loaded onto a twenty-four-foot rental truck, the hammocks were suspended inside special individual transportation units filled with water kept at a cozy 76° Fahrenheit. Finally I had something to do that would directly benefit my patients: before we drove off into the chill night air, I liberally rubbed vitamin A and D ointment onto the dolphins' bodies to help prevent chafing and desiccation.

While a team of police officers on motorcycles led us through busy city streets, I kept my focus on the dolphins. Thankfully, the dolphin team included four other people who'd done this many times before. Together we monitored the dolphins' respirations, heart rate, and demeanor. At one point, the truck screeched abruptly to a stop, and a wave of water swelled up and out of the transport boxes, all over me. Drenched, I burst into surprised laughter. I thought maybe this was like a wedding where there's always one thing that isn't quite perfect. I decided it was fine with me if my getting soaked turned out to be that one thing.

At the Philadelphia airport, things went much more smoothly. We met up as planned with the other transport team from New Jersey, and I had time to check briefly on Sasha and Naia. I climbed into the back of the truck and spent a few minutes with each. Sasha, an adult female, looked a bit on the plump side. Naia, a youngster, had beautiful brown eyes. Both appeared to be doing well.

All four dolphins were quickly loaded on the cargo plane that would fly us all to Nassau via the Mobile airport, where the other twelve dolphins had already arrived. The logistics team did a terrific job, and even though it was the middle of the night, the rendezvous went perfectly. Before long, we took off again with all sixteen dolphins on board, scheduled to arrive in Nassau at sunrise.

___

During the brief flight, I thought again about recent events. On one hand, these were lucky dolphins indeed. On the other hand, I felt sad for their trainers and for the many people in Mississippi who'd helped with the amazing rescue of the dolphins. It must have been very difficult for them to say good-bye. I also knew that not everyone agreed on the move—or the sale—of the animals to the resort. But it would have been years before the dolphins could live together again as a group, since their hurricane-damaged facility had to be completely rebuilt, at a time when funds and energy were desperately needed for relief of the human devastation caused by Katrina.

Though everything had gone well so far, my stomach felt tight. I kept fiddling with the elastic band in my hair, which was tied in a ponytail to keep it from falling in my face. I wanted no distractions as I worked my way to the back of the plane, stopping to check each dolphin. Toni, an inquisitive adult female, lifted her head as if to greet me. I smiled as I patted her and whispered, “Hello.” She nestled back down into her hammock. Next I came to Kelly, who seemed to be whistling in conversation with Tamra in the carrier next to her. These were among the dolphins that had been swept out to sea, and yet they looked almost unscathed. As the plane continued to jet southward in the early morning hours, the only visible reminder of their struggle to survive was a tear in Toni's dorsal fin.

BOOK: The Rhino with Glue-On Shoes
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