Rest in peace, seagoing friends
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They attracted crowds. They captivated biologists. They mesmerized
students. And now, they are gone.
Dex, the second of two bottlenose dolphins that remained feeding
in the Back Bay for more than three months, has died.
The 2- or 3-year-old creature was buried Friday next to Sandy --
the other dolphin who milled about in the bay -- near the Upper
Newport Bay Science Center.
We’re not in the habit of writing animal obituaries, and this
space is generally reserved for the more light-hearted human tales
from the community.
And yet the pair’s showing up near us for so long is, at least, a
reminder that while we fight over multimillion-dollar beachfront
hotel development, and the politics of public versus private dock
space or of dredging, we are neighbors to a vast amount of marine
life in our bays and on our shores.
The lesson appears not to have been lost on locals, as many
flocked to the Back Bay near the Coast Highway Bridge for an intimate
look at the creatures that became instant celebrities.
“It’s becoming a phenomenon,” marine biologist Dennis Kelly said
back in August.
Kelly and his students took a keen interest in the dolphins, all
the way to the end, and now beyond. Using skin and tissue samples, a
group of scientists and students will seek a cause of death. The
findings could also shine light on the death of Sandy, thought to be
an older and bigger dolphin, who was found dead in late September but
was too badly decomposed to determine why the creature died.
In the meantime, just as we tout the accomplishments of people on
these pages, we celebrate our smiling lost friends from the sea, just
for being themselves.
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