UK & World News
Mystery As Hundreds Of Pelicans Die In Peru
The bodies of hundreds of pelicans have been found in Peru on the same beaches where almost 900 dead dolphins have washed up over the last month.
The government said they will investigate the deaths of almost 600 birds found along a 70km stretch of northern coastline - the majority of which are pelicans, but also include gannets.
The fisherman's association in Puerto Eten, north Peru, said it found around 1,200 dead pelicans last week along a 170km string of beaches.
Peru's Institute of the Sea's regional chief, Edward Barriga, described a similar event in the area from 1997 when a lack of anchovies resulted in the deaths of pelicans and cormorants.
At the time, the El Nino meteorological phenomenon was blamed for the lack of food. It occurs in the Pacific Ocean around every five years and results in variations in the temperature and pressure of the sea.
Over the last month the bodies of as many as 877 dolphins have also washed up in the region, which is approximately 700km northwest of the capital, Lima.
Officials are looking into whether a virus or seismic tests that have been carried out nearby could be the cause of the deaths.
But the government's fisheries minister said that based on the evidence available they had not found a relationship between the animal bodies and tests related to the exploration of oil.
what do you think?

Valerie Wood
Pollution maybe?

Jacqui Morrison
if this El Nino is every 5 years and the last time this happened was 1997, then it is due again this year! mystery solved.

Thomas Jenkinson
Perhaps the dolphins declared war on the pelican! And these bodies are the result of years of battling!





Shaun Carachi
11:51am on 30/4/2012
well it does not take much for me to see whats wrong here. Seismic tests??? both dolphins and birds navigate by earths magnetic field, that is the short explanation.