San Francisco, Jan 13 : A rapt crowd followed a trail of bubbles that zipped over the
surface of a seaside pond in the ruins of a 19th century bath in San
Francisco.
San Francisco's newest star — the first river otter seen in
the city in decades — surfaced its whiskery head furtively, a mouth full of sea
grass. The crowd oohed as large waves pounded rocks just offshore, a briny smell
and chill in the air.
The otter ducked back under water and took the sea
grass underneath a concrete remnant of the historic baths, where the animal was
building a nest.
"We came here to see the baths and this was just a
bonus," said Eliza Durkin, who brought her son Jonathan to the site for a school
project on historic places.
Beyond tourists, the otter has mystified and
delighted conservationists, who are piecing together clues to figure out how he
got there. The furry creature was first spotted by birdwatchers in September and
has since settled into the City by the Bay.
River otters once thrived in
the San Francisco Bay area, but development, hunting and environmental pollution
in the 19th and 20th centuries has taken its toll on the once thriving local
population.
The critters are a living barometer of water quality - if
it's bad they cannot thrive. But new populations being seen north and east of
San Francisco are giving hope to conservationists that years of environmental
regulations and new technologies are making a difference.
"The fact that
this otter is in San Francisco and doing so well in other regions of the Bay
Area, it's a good message that there's hope for the watershed," said Megan
Isadore, director of outreach and education for the River Otter Ecology Project,
a group that studies otter populations further north and in the bay.
The
group said until now it had no evidence the creatures had returned to San
Francisco, and the last sighting was nearly a half-century ago as best they can
tell.
The otter is nicknamed "Sutro Sam" after the old baths, which were
named after former San Francisco Mayor Adolph Sutro, who built the building
which at the time was an engineering marvel.
The facility opened in 1896
on a cliff facing the Pacific Ocean, its baths fed by the salty ocean tides and
a freshwater seep. They were torn down and burned in a fire in 1966, and the
building's carcass has long been a tourist draw on the city's rugged, western
shoreline.
The aquatic mammal seems to have found the mix of the
environment he needs to make a home, to the delight of tourists and local nature
lovers.
"They do need freshwater to drink and keep their fur clean,"
Isadore said. "They are also happy in salt and brackish water — wherever there
is food — and he is getting freshwater from seeps behind the
baths."
River otters can be found in other regions of the San Francisco
Bay area. To the north of the Golden Gate, the researchers are tracking a group
in Marin County. They have also found river otters in shore-side San Francisco
Bay area communities of Alameda, Richmond and Martinez.
"Habitat
destruction had an impact on the river otters," said Dorren Gurrola, a science
teacher at the Marine Mammal Center, which studies Sam's relatives, the sea
otter. "So it's always exciting to see these animals return to their
habitat."
Young males like Sam often are the ones that travel away from
groups, looking for food. If they find a new, hospitable habitat, others
including females may join and create the basis of a new colony, Gurrola
said.
While there is no certain reason for Sam's appearance in San
Francisco, Isadore and biologists working to unlock more clues have some leads
to go on.
He could have swam across the bay's mouth from Marin County,
and scat collected from Sam will be analyzed to see if there's a genetic link to
that population. But now, Sam seems to be happy swimming around and munching on
small fish, including goldfish discarded in the area.
"We're just trying
to piece things together in a logical way," Isadore said. "River otters
sometimes even stow away on boats, we just don't
know."
Ends
SA/EN
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Rare San Francisco river otter stumps researchers
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