- Washington Post - 3 hours agoAt least 357 bottlenose dolphins, the largest number in 25 years, have washed ... Since the beginning of July, 357 dead or dying dolphins have ...
Die-off of bottlenose dolphins, linked to virus, is worst in 25 years
A widespread die-off of bottlenose dolphins off the mid-Atlantic Coast — the worst episode of its kind in more than a quarter century — almost certainly is the work of a virus that killed more than 740 dolphins in the same region in 1987 and 1988, marine scientists said Tuesday.
Since the beginning of July, 357 dead or dying dolphins have washed ashore from New York to North Carolina — 186 of them in Virginia. Authorities have received numerous additional reports of carcasses floating in the ocean, said Teri Rowles, director of the marine mammal health and stranding response program for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s fisheries service. The actual number of deaths is certainly greater, she said.More health and science newsDolphin die-off linked to virus
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The cause is believed to be cetacean morbillivirus, which has been confirmed or is suspected in 32 of 33 dolphins tested so far, she said. Marine officials are looking at the possibility of other factors, including high levels of polychlorinated biphenyls and other chemicals in the water, but have not linked the die-off to anything else.
From 2007 to 2012, the average number of yearly strandings — when dead or dying dolphins wash ashore — in the same states was 36, Rowles said.
“If, indeed, this plays out the way that die-off occurred, we’re looking at the die-off being higher and the morbillivirus spreading southward,” Rowles said. The 1987-88 episode affected 50 percent of the coastal migratory bottlenose dolphins, according to NOAA’s Web site, leading them to be classified as “depleted.”
The virus poses no threat to people, though it is related to the virus that causes measles in humans and distemper in canines. So far, there is no evidence of the virus jumping to other species, but other animals that have washed ashore are being tested, the scientists said in a telephone news conference Tuesday afternoon.
Secondary infections could be dangerous. Authorities urged people to stay away from stranded dolphins.
“For people not trained in working with these animals and who don’t understand the risk, it’s much better . . . to stay away from them, particularly if you have open wounds,” Rowles said.
It is not clear what started the most recent problem, but Jerry Saliki, a virologist at the University of Georgia, said enough time had probably passed since the last mass die-off that herds of dolphins now lack natural immunity to morbillivirus. It is spread by direct contact between the animals or inhalation of droplets exhaled by infected dolphins above the water’s surface.
“When the collective immunity drops below a certain, critical point, which we don’t really know for marine mammals, then the whole population becomes susceptible,” Saliki said. Generally the virus causes death by suppressing the immune system, leaving the dolphin vulnerable to pneumonia and other lethal infections.
The large number of deaths in Virginia “is really not surprising if you understand how the population of dolphins works,” said W. Mark Swingle, director of research and conservation for the Virginia Aquarium and Marine Science Center, which is part of a network of agencies that responds to marine animal strandings along the East Coast.
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Tuesday, August 27, 2013
At least 357 dophins died on Atlantic Coast since July 1st 2013
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Die-off of bottlenose dolphins, linked to virus, is worst in 25 years
There must be something in the water that wasn't there one year ago for 357 at least dead this year. Normal deaths during the summer is only about 36 in a normal year. So, something has radically changed in the ocean during this time. With this many dophins dying I'm wondering if the water is safe to be in along the Atlantic coast for beach goers too?
The biggest known change over the last two years might be radiation leaking into the ocean at Fukushima. Could mutations of 1 or multicelled animals or plants in the ocean be mutating and causing these changes? OR could the release of oil constantly in the Gulf of Mexico of ancient untreated oil for months into the water during the oil spill in the Gulf have something to do with this?
Another problem could be toxins in garbage dumped into the ocean throughout the Atlantic region in Europe and the U.S. and Canada.