California's Office of Oil Spill Prevention and Response (OSPR) Wildlife Rehabilitation and Research Programs
David A. Jessup, DVM, MPVM
Office of Oil Spill Prevention and Response, California Department of Fish
and Game, Rancho Cordova, CA
Abstract
Catastrophic oil spills and toxic substance spills can cause considerable
environmental damage and loss of animal life. In 1990 the legislature of California enacted SB
2040 (Lempert, Keene, Seastrand) which placed a $.04 per barrel tax on oil transported or
processed in California, the proceeds of which are to be used to prevent spills, to respond to
spills, to clean up those which occur where no responsible party is identified (orphan spills), to
rehabilitate affected wildlife habitat, and to care for wildlife affected by oil. To meet these
responsibilities OSPR has developed a veterinary team, built and outfitted a pair of mobile
veterinary laboratories and washing and care trailers, and a Mobile Oily Bird Care and
Rehabilitation Trailer (MOBCART). This equipment is capable of reaching any location in California
within 24 hours.
The legislation (SB 2040) states "The administrator shall establish
rescue and rehabilitation stations for sea birds, sea otters, and other marine mammals." To
comply with this charge OSPR is building a facility at University of California Santa Cruz (next
to Long Marine Laboratory) for veterinary care, rehabilitation and research on oiled marine
wildlife. When completed in the summer of 1995 the facility will have cost approximately $5
million dollars and will be capable of caring for 125 sea otters, and be flexible enough to care
for other species of marine animals and house ongoing research projects. To further meet the above
goal a second piece of legislation SB 775 (Watson) was passed by the California Legislature
allowing OSPR to use the interest from the $50 million dollar emergency response fund (a
total of approximately $7 million dollars over a 3 year period) to establish a Marine Wildlife
Care Network for the entire California coast in conjunction with existing scientific, educational
and wildlife rehabilitation facilities. Current plans call for these additional centers to be
developed in San Diego, Los Angeles, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, the San Francisco Bay Area
and Arcata/Eureka. Under the Wildlife Care Network and recent changes in Title 14 of the
California Code minimum veterinary care standards, minimum wildlife rehabilitation facility
standards, and minimum training required for all persons working on oiled wildlife in California
are prescribed. Participants in the Network will share pertinent information, improve and
standardize treatment protocols and cooperate in research. SB 2040 also says "The
administrator shall conduct studies and evaluations necessary for improving .....oil spill
wildlife rehabilitation..." And further states "The administrator shall evaluate
potential adverse impacts on the environment and public health including, but not limited to,
adverse toxic impacts on water quality, fisheries, and wildlife with consideration to
bioaccumulation and synergistic impacts...." Currently OSPR is funding research at several
California Universities and at Hubbs/Sea World Research Institute. Research programs address the
effects of oil on various organ systems in sea otters (using mink as a model), immediate detection
of trace amounts of oil in the fur of live animals, characterizing the potential effects of oil on
the immune response of sea otters, characterizing the immune response of harbor seals including
differentiating the effects of the rehabilitation process from exposure to oil and other health
hazards, establishing baseline health information for pinnipeds, updating information on the
status of marine mammal populations and delineating populations at greatest risk of exposure to
oil, and establishing baseline health information on key marine bird species and population
status.
All of this research is designed to improve our ability to care for oiled
marine wildlife, and to improve our ability to determine both the immediate and the sublethal
effects of oil pollution on marine animal populations. This will enable Federal and State trustee
agencies to complete comprehensive wildlife injury assessments as part of the Natural Resource
Damage Assessment (NRDA) process. Settlements with responsible parties will enable trustee
agencies to undertake restoration of injured wildlife resources.