© 2025 WLRN
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Rare sawfish turning up dead — again — in South Florida waters

Mote and FWC respond to distressed smalltooth sawfish on April 5, 2024 in the Lower Keys. The 15.5ft female was attended to by staff where she was administered vitamins and antibiotics, measured, given an acoustic tag and immediately released.
FWC
Mote and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation researchers respond to distressed smalltooth sawfish in April 2024 during a months-long die-off that killed more than 50 endangered sawfish found mostly in waters around South Florida. The 15.5-foot female was given vitamins and antibiotics, measured, implanted with an acoustic tag before being released.
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Endangered sawfish are again turning up dead in Florida waters, raising fears that a months-long die-off that killed more than 50 sawfish last year could strike again.

As of Monday, six sawfish have died this winter, among a total of 22 reports of sawfish showing signs of distress and spinning in the water, a spokesperson for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission confirmed to WLRN. Biologists were able to perform necropsies on five.

Two of the dead fish had been tagged when they were healthy to track their movements, including a 13-foot female discovered near Flamingo in Everglades National Park.

READ MORE: As sawfish deaths mounted, wildlife officers and researchers scrambled to respond, records show

The large sawfish had been tagged by Florida State University researcher Dean Grubbs off Cedar Key in 2023, making it the farthest north a sawfish had been tagged, he said. At the time, scientists hoped that was a sign the fish might be recovering after being nearly wiped out and added to the endangered species list in 2003.

This winter’s deaths come nearly nine months after the baffling die-off that also afflicted dozens of other species subsided. Fifty-four deaths were confirmed last year, with hundreds more reported sick or dead, during a widespread die-off that lasted nearly six months. The ailing sawfish first showed up in the Lower Keys, a couple months after anglers and boaters started spotting dozens of other species exhibiting the same odd spinning behavior. Dead sawfish were eventually spotted miles away in the Upper Keys.

After months of quiet, a dead sawfish was spotted late December and a second on New Year’s eve. The remaining four have appeared this year.

Scientists suspect a toxic bottom-dwelling algae is making fish sick, but are continuing to investigate what caused the algae to become lethal to sawfish.

The algae can produce cigua toxins, like the kind that produce ciguatera, and normally rests benignly on the seafloor or clings to seagrass. An event, possibly a scorching heat wave that swept across the Keys over the summer of 2023, may have changed the ecosystem’s dynamic in a way that allowed the algae to spread and become more damaging, scientists say.

Because sawfish spend much of their lives resting on the seafloor, and have gills located on their bottom sides, scientists suspect they are more susceptible. Other fish species that showed signs of distress have been able to recover. Scientists at the University of South Alabama who examined hundreds of those species also found multiple toxins in their livers, making it hard to isolate the cigua toxin found in the sawfish as the cause

Some scientists suspect the two-month long heat wave, which caused widespread coral bleaching and made worse by rising temperatures fuled by climate change, triggered the event by changing the make-up and balance of power in the community of algae where sawfish live.

Jenny Staletovich is WLRN's Environment Editor. She has been a journalist working in Florida for nearly 20 years. Contact Jenny at jstaletovich@wlrnnews.org
More On This Topic