Community Corner

Mystery Goo Spreads To Peninsula Birds

Hundreds of East Bay seabirds are afflicted, with several dead since Friday. Officials can not identify the substance.

An unidentified substance that has led to the deaths of at least 25 birds in the East Bay has also impacted birds across the Bay in Foster City, a wildlife emergency response official said today.

The viscous substance was confirmed Sunday on birds along the Peninsula, according to Rebecca Dmytryk, executive director of the non-profit Wildlife Emergency Services.

Rescue crews today are checking the Peninsula coastline between Foster City and Coyote Point to look for other distressed birds, Dmytryk said.

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The mysterious substance was reported Friday at multiple sites in Alameda County, including the Crab Cove Visitor Center in Alameda, Hayward Regional Shoreline and at the San Leandro Marina, according to officials with International Bird Rescue, which has a rescue center in Fairfield.

At least 25 dead birds were brought to the Fairfield center, which has treated more than 240 others covered with the contaminant.

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Tests have shown that the substance, which is apparently not petroleum-based, breaks down the birds’ feather structure, preventing them from regulating their body temperatures in the cold Bay waters, leading to hypothermia or death, according to the nonprofit.

Several of the dead birds have been taken to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s lab in Sacramento to determine the cause of death and to try to identify the substance.

Wildlife Emergency Services officials are asking for volunteers to help find any other distressed birds in the region.

Anyone interested in volunteering is asked to fill out an application at http://www.wildlifeservices.org/PAGES/VOLUNTEER.html.

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