There is also concern that the results of necropsies and other tissue tests wont be released to the public.
In a letter last month, NOAA Fisheries warned the locals who are authorized to collect dolphin samples that they are not to send tissue for independent testing or discuss findings without NOAA permission. The letter cited the active criminal investigation associated with the oil spill.
Kim Amendola, with NOAA Fisheries, said the web page is about two weeks old.
The Frequently Asked Questions just went up today. The table at the top went up today, she said. The bar graphs and tables will update weekly, she said, but the historical data wont change.
A spokesman with the National Wildlife Federation announced the web link in an e-mail Tuesday.
Weve been tracking dolphin deaths in the Gulf this year and have been frustrated at the lack of information released to this point, said Miles Grant with the NWF. However, today we found what looks like a new NOAA website with extensive data on dolphin deaths.
Im not clear when this page went live or how often its been updated. Theres nothing about it in the NOAA newsroom, Grant said. In any case, were glad to see it.
Grant said the federations senior scientist, Dr. Doug Inkley, was digging into the information.
If NOAA is going to be releasing this data themselves, thats positive, Grant said. We were so frustrated that we werent getting answers, we were wondering if wed need to file a Freedom of Information request.
The web page charts the numbers of stranded bottlenose dolphins of all sizes and compares those numbers by month to the numbers in 2010 and also to an average of deaths in each month from 2002 to 2009.
The difference is striking. The spikes are easy to see.
Then it breaks out the premature or infant dolphins this year and charts the dramatic difference when compared to averages of years past.
On Tuesday evening, the locator map pinpointing dolphin strandings in the northern Gulf was current through Sunday.
Amendola, however, said the media would have to call for daily updated numbers.
As of Tuesday, the total bottlenose dolphins dead this year in the northern Gulf according to NOAA is 136, 59 of them premature or infant calves. Of those, 73 were on Mississippi and Alabama coasts, 48 of them stillborn or premature.
There are several still undetermined.