She Steals Surfboards by the Seashore. She’s a Sea Otter. California wildlife officials are hoping to apprehend a 5-year-old sea otter, who has a knack for riding the waves after committing longboard larceny.
raised by humans, what do you expect!
She Steals Surfboards by the Seashore. She’s a Sea Otter.
California
wildlife officials are hoping to apprehend a 5-year-old sea otter, who
has a knack for riding the waves after committing longboard larceny.
After
being weaned, the sea otter named 841 was raised at the Monterey Bay
Aquarium in California not to form positive associations with humans
upon rerelease. But she soon shed her fear of humans.Credit...Mark Woodward/Native Santa Cruz
Annie Roth lives in Santa Cruz, Calif., where she knows enough to stay away from sea otters in the ocean.
For
the past few summers, numerous surfers in Santa Cruz, Calif., have been
victims of a crime at sea: boardjacking. The culprit is a female sea
otter, who accosts the wave riders, seizing and even damaging their
surfboards in the process.
After a
weekend in which the otter’s behavior seemed to grow more aggressive,
wildlife officials in the area said on Monday they have decided to put a
stop to these acts of otter larceny.
“Due
to the increasing public safety risk, a team from C.D.F.W. and the
Monterey Bay Aquarium trained in the capture and handling of sea otters
has been deployed to attempt to capture and rehome her,” a spokesperson
for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife said in a statement.
Local
officials call the animal Otter 841. The 5-year-old female is well
known, for both her bold behavior and her ability to hang 10. And she
has a tragic back story, with officials now forced to take steps that
illustrate the ways human desire to get close to wild animals can cost
the animals their freedom, or worse, their lives.
California
sea otters, also known as southern sea otters, are an endangered
species found only along California’s central coast. Hundreds of
thousands of these otters once roamed the state’s coastal waters,
helping to keep the kelp forests healthy as they consumed sea urchins.
But when colonists moved in on the West Coast, the species was hunted to
near-extinction until a ban was put in place in 1911.
Today, around 3,000 remain, many in areas frequented by kayakers, surfers and paddle boarders.
Despite
these close quarters, interactions between sea otters and humans remain
rare. The animals have an innate fear of humans and usually go to great
lengths to avoid us, said Tim Tinker, an ecologist at the University of
California, Santa Cruz who has spent decades studying the marine
mammals. A sea otter approaching a human “isn’t normal,” he said, adding
“but just because it’s not normal doesn’t mean it never happens.”
Otters
have been known to approach humans during hormonal surges that coincide
with a pregnancy, or as a result of being fed or repeatedly approached
by people. That is likely what occurred with otter 841’s mother.
Bite marks on a surfboard.Credit...Mark Woodward/Native Santa Cruz
Wild sea otters can be dangerous, and “have sharp teeth and jaws strong enough to crush clams,” said one scientist.Credit...Mark Woodward/Native Santa Cruz
She
was orphaned and raised in captivity. But after she was released into
the wild, humans started offering her squid and she quickly became
habituated. She was removed again when she started climbing aboard
kayaks in search of handouts, ending up at the Marine Wildlife
Veterinary Care and Research Center in Santa Cruz, where researchers
quickly realized she was pregnant. It was while back in captivity that
she gave birth to 841.
The
pup was raised by her mother until she was weaned, then moved to the
Monterey Bay Aquarium. To bolster her chances for success upon release,
841’s caretakers took measures to prevent the otter from forming
positive associations with humans, including wearing masks and ponchos
that obscured their appearance when they were around her.
Yet 841 quickly lost her fear of humans, though local experts cannot explain precisely why.
“After
one year of being in the wild without issue, we started receiving
reports of her interactions with surfers, kayakers and paddle boarders,”
Jessica Fujii, sea otter program manager at the Monterey Bay Aquarium,
said. “We do not know why this started. We have no evidence that she was
fed. But it has persisted in the summers for the last couple of years.”
Otter
841 was first observed climbing aboard water craft in Santa Cruz in
2021. At first, the behavior was a rarity, but over time the otter grew
more bold. This past weekend, the otter was observed stealing surfboards
on three separate occasions.
On
Monday, Joon Lee, 40, a software engineer, was surfing at Steamer Lane, a
popular surf spot in Santa Cruz, when 841 approached his board.
“I tried to paddle away but I wasn’t able to get far before it bit off my leash,” he said.
Mr.
Lee abandoned his board and watched in horror as the otter climbed atop
it and proceeded to rip chunks out of it with her powerful jaws.
“I
tried to get it off by flipping the board over and pushing it away, but
it was so fixated on my surfboard for whatever reason, it just kept
attacking,” he said.
Another surfboard is commandeered.Credit...Mark Woodward/Native Santa Cruz
While
Mr. Lee immediately recognized the danger he was in, not everyone in
the water is so aware. Last month, Noah Wormhoudt, 16, was catching some
waves with a friend off Cowell’s Beach in Santa Cruz when 841 swam up.
“I
started paddling away trying to avoid it but it kept getting closer and
closer. I jumped off my board and then it jumped onto my board,” he
recalled. “It seemed friendly, so we got comfortable with it. It was a
pretty cool experience.”
Caught
up in the excitement of the moment, Mr. Wormhoudt said he “wasn’t
really like thinking about how it could bite my finger off.”
The
young surfer watched from the water while the otter stayed atop his
board as the swell rolled in. “The otter was shredding, caught a couple
of nice waves,” Mr. Wormhoudt said.
Such
situations are extremely dangerous, said Gena Bentall, director and
senior scientist with Sea Otter Savvy, an organization that works to
reduce human-caused disturbances to sea otters and promote responsible
wildlife viewing. “Otters have sharp teeth and jaws strong enough to
crush clams,” she said.
Contact with
humans is also dangerous for the otters. If a human should be bitten,
the state has no choice but to euthanize the otter. And with so few sea
otters left, the loss of even one individual is a hindrance to the
species’ recovery.
If the authorities
succeed in capturing 841, she will return to the Monterey Bay Aquarium
before being transferred to a different one, where she will live out her
days. Her captors have their work cut out for them. Multiple attempts
to capture her have been made, none successful.
“She’s been quite talented at evading us,” Ms. Fujii said.
Until the otter can be captured, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife is asking surfers to avoid her at all costs.
Experts also had a message for people who share their close encounters with a sea otter on social media.
“Reporting
these interactions to the appropriate personnel, and not sharing them
on social media — where it can be misinterpreted as a fun, positive
interaction where that may not be the case — is really important,” Ms.
Fujii said. “I know that’s hard to do. It gets lots of likes and
attention, but in the long run, it can be detrimental to the animal.”
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