Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/124462
Título: High pilot whale (g. melas) mortality due to morbillivirus in the Mediterranean sea
Autores/as: Alves Godinho,Ana 
Herráez Thomas, Pedro Manuel 
Espinosa De Los Monteros Y Zayas, Antonio 
Esperón Fajardo,Fernando 
Clavel, Cristina
Bernabé, Antonio
Sánchez Vizcaino, J. Manuel
Verborgh, Philippe
De Stephanis, Renaud
Toledano, Francisco
Arbelo Hernández, Manuel Antonio 
Bayón, Alejandro
Fernández Rodríguez, Antonio Jesús 
Clasificación UNESCO: 310907 Patología
Fecha de publicación: 2009
Conferencia: 23rd Annual Conference of the European Cetacean Society (ECS 2009) 
Resumen: Morbilliviruses have emerged as significant pathogens of cetaceans and pinnipeds worldwide. Two cetacean morbilliviruses have been identified and named porpoise morbillivirus (PMV) and dolphin morbillivirus (DMV). PMV was isolated from harbor porpoises that died along the Irish coast. DMV was first identified in striped dolphins from the Mediterranean. Although, morbillivirus outbreaks have not been previously reported in pilot whales, antibodies to morbilliviruses have been reported in 86% of two species of pilot whales (Globicephala melas and macrorrhynchus) in the western Atlantic. Barrett et al. (1995) found that 93% of stranded long-finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas) were morbillivirus seropositive, providing further evidence that cetacean morbilliviruses are widespread. Interestingly, molecular evidences from one pilot whale (PW) stranded in New Jersey (USA), which died with encephalitis, suggested that the long-finned pilot whale is host of a different, novel type of cetacean morbillivirus (called pilot whale morbillivirus or PWMV), and distinct from both PMV and DMV. We report the first unusual high mortality event of lethal morbilliviral infection in long-finned pilot whales that occurred in the Mediterranean Sea. Sequence analysis of a 426 bp conserved fragment of the morbillivirus phosphoprotein (P) gene suggests that the virus involved in this whale mortality event is phylogenetically more closely related to DMV rather to the novel PWMV identified by Taubenberger in a pilot whale. (Accepted, in Emerging Infectious Diseases Journal)
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/124462
Fuente: 23rd Annual Conference of the European Cetacean Society (ECS 2009)
Colección:Póster de congreso
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