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http://hdl.handle.net/10553/70853
Title: | Veterinary pathology of stranded cetaceans in Canary Islands (06-12) | Authors: | Fernández Rodríguez, Antonio Jesús Arbelo Hernández, Manuel Antonio Sierra Pulpillo, Eva María Sacchini , Simona Andrada Borzollino, Marisa Ana Vela, Ana Isabel Domínguez, Lucas Quesada Canales, Ildefonso Óscar Paz Sanchez, Yania Groch, Katia R. Diaz Delgado, Josue |
UNESCO Clasification: | 3105 Peces y fauna silvestre 310907 Patología |
Keywords: | Stranded cetaceans Pathology Canary Islands |
Issue Date: | 2019 | Abstract: | The occurrence of disease in aquatic organisms will be probably one of the long-term consequences of climate change and environmental degradation. Cetaceans are regarded as sentinel species to monitor marine and marine-terrestrial interface ecosystems wherein humans are strictly integrated. Cetaceans are exposed to environmental stressors either anthropogenic, e.g., chemical and acoustic pollution, fisheries, maritime traffic, tourism industry, and non-anthropogenic, hereafter ‘natural,’ e.g., biotoxins, pathogens (bacteria, fungi, parasites, viruses). . Some of these pathogens have epizootic potential, are zoonotic or display complex pathogeneses in which biotic, e.g., genetic stock, immunologic dysfunction, and abiotic, e.g., chemical pollutants, may play a major role. This study describes the pathologic findings and most probable causes of death (CD) of 224 cetaceans stranded along the coastline of the Canary Islands (Spain) over a 7-year period, 2006–2012. Most probable CD, grouped as pathologic categories (PCs), was identified in 208/224 (92.8%) examined animals. Within natural PCs, those associated with good nutritional status represented 70/208 (33.6%), whereas, those associated with significant loss of nutritional status represented 49/208 (23.5%). Fatal intra- and interspecific traumatic interactions were 37/208 (17.8%). Vessel collisions included 24/208 (11.5%). Neonatal/perinatal pathology involved 13/208 (6.2%). Fatal interaction with fishing activities comprised 10/208 (4.8%). Within anthropogenic PCs, foreign body-associated pathology represented 5/208 (2.4%). A CD could not be determined in 16/208 (7.7%) cases. Natural PCs were dominated by infectious and parasitic disease processes. Herein, our results suggest that between 2006 and 2012, in the Canary Islands, direct human activity appeared responsible for 19% of cetaceans deaths, while natural pathologies accounted for 81%. These results, integrating novel findings and published reports, aid in delineating baseline knowledge on cetacean pathology and may be of value to rehabilitators, caregivers, diagnosticians and future conservation policies. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/70853 | Source: | World Marine Mammal Conference 2019. Barcelona, Spain, 9th-12th December, p. 231 |
Appears in Collections: | Actas de congresos |
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