Seventeen dead dolphins washed up on Mauritius’s shore after an oil spill from a Japanese ship

17 dead dolphins washed up on Mauritius’s shore, a government official told Reuters, and a month after an oil spill from a Japanese ship that ran aground caused a major ecological disaster in the area.

“The dead dolphins had several wounds and blood around their jaws, no trace of oil however. The ones that survived, around ten, seemed very fatigued and could barely swim,” informed Jasvin Sok Appadu from the fisheries ministry.

The dead dolphins have been taken to the Albion Fisheries Research Centre for an autopsy, said Appadu. Results are expected to come on Wednesday night.

A spokeswoman for local Mauritian environmental group Eco-Sud called for the autopsy results to be released publicly and said the group wanted to be present during the autopsy “to better understand why the dolphins died,” but was still waiting for a response from authorities.

The oil spill came from the Japanese-owned MV Wakashio, which ran aground on 25th July and began to spill oil about a week later.

Scientists say that, the full impact of the spill is still unfolding, and the damage could impact Mauritius and its tourism-dependent economy for decades. [USKCN2592Z6] The wildlife at risk include the critically endangered Pink Pigeon, endemic to the island, the seagrasses, clownfish and mangrove forests, whose roots serve as nurseries for fish

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