Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/122114
Título: New potential insight for cetacean welfare assessments: molecular detection of cetacean poxvirus through a non-invasive skin sampling device
Autores/as: Segura-Gothlin, Simone
Fernández Rodríguez, Antonio Jesús 
Almunia Portolés, Javier 
Câmara, Nakita 
Arbelo Hernández, Manuel Antonio 
Alonso Almorox, Paula 
Sierra Pulpillo, Eva 
Clasificación UNESCO: 3105 Peces y fauna silvestre
310907 Patología
Palabras clave: Cetacean poxvirus
Skin lesions
DNA extraction
Health indicator
Welfare
Fecha de publicación: 2023
Editor/a: Servicio de Publicaciones y Difusión Científica de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (ULPGC) 
Conferencia: VIII International Symposium on Marine Sciences (ISMS 2022) 
Resumen: Animal welfare can be understood as animals’ adaptation to their environment, resulting in a balance of positive and negative stimuli affecting physical and physiological health as well as emotional state and behaviour. Thus, health is an important aspect of welfare, being especially relevant in welfare assessments. In last decades, characteristic poxvirus-like lesions have been reported as a potential general health indicator in both freeranging and under human care odontocetes (CePV-1) and mysticetes (CePV-2). There is an overall agreement that these distinguishable lesions are caused due to chronic environmental disturbances leading into immunosuppression and, therefore, more susceptibility to disease. Most studies have related the presence of these lesions with tattoo-skin-disease through visual assessments, depriving of diagnostic methods to correctly corroborate CePV infection. On the other hand, some authors have used biopsy as a skin sampling procedure to further either histologically or molecularly determine viral infection. Nevertheless, extrapolate this sampling technique on cetaceans under human care might be invasive, adding to this that it implies long-term handling which can negatively affect animals’ wellbeing. Accordingly, aiming to address skin biopsies intrusiveness, we developed a model study validating cytology cell samplers (CCS) as a non-invasive skin sampling device to detect CePV-1 in twelve tattoo-like-lesions from two stranded cetaceans on Canary coasts. To sustain the results, two different genomic extraction protocols to compare both skin sampling procedures were performed, using DNA Tissue Kit STM (QuickGene, Kurabo, Japan) and DNeasyTM Blood and Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Inc., Valencia, CA). Our findings show that, through the first extraction kit, a percentage of positivity of 83.3% with CCS was obtained compared to 91.7% with biopsies. However, better results were obtained with second extraction kit with 100% of positivity using CCS. Confirming poxvirus lesions in cetaceans under human care through CCS could be a potential health measure to welfare evaluation.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/122114
ISBN: 978-84-9042-477-3
Fuente: Abstracts Volume VIII International Symposium on Marine Sciences, July 2022 / coordinación, María Esther Torres Padrón, p. 261-262
Colección:Póster de congreso
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