• Catastrophic disease events in marine ma

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Thu Jun 18 21:30:34 2020
    Catastrophic disease events in marine mammals mostly caused by viruses


    Date:
    June 18, 2020
    Source:
    Virginia Tech
    Summary:
    Viruses were responsible for 72 percent of these events and caused
    20 times the number of deaths than bacterial outbreaks.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    As the COVID-19 pandemic sweeps across the globe, people are beginning
    to understand, at a very personal level, the ways in which infectious
    diseases can devastate life. But disease outbreaks are not confined to
    just humans or to life on land.


    ==========================================================================
    "We are perhaps more alert than ever to the catastrophic impacts of
    infectious disease in both humans and animals. Our task now is to begin
    to understand what drives these events, particularly in species like
    marine mammals, where our knowledge is even more limited," said Claire Sanderson, a research associate in the Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation within the College of Natural Resources and Environment and
    the research coordinator of the Center for African Resources: Animals, Communities, and Land Use (CARACAL).

    In 2000, over 10,000 endangered Caspian seals died in less than a
    four-month span. Researchers later discovered that the culprit behind
    this devastating mass mortality event was canine distemper virus.

    Infectious disease-induced mass mortality events are known to afflict
    a variety of species, including invertebrates, birds, fish, and both
    land and aquatic mammals. However, these events in aquatic mammals are understudied compared to their land-dwelling counterparts.

    To help fill in the knowledge gaps, Sanderson worked with Kathleen
    Alexander, a professor in the Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation
    and co-founder of CARACAL, to evaluate the factors influencing the
    occurrence of these events in marine mammals. They published their
    findings in Global Change Biology.

    Sanderson and Alexander defined a mass mortality event as a "devastating
    number of fatalities within the same species over a brief period of
    time," which is also dependent on the species' conservation status
    and population size. Beyond the deaths of individual animals, mass
    mortality events can initiate a cascade of events with severe ecological repercussions. Affected populations are often at a greater risk of local extinction, and changes in community structure can upset an ecosystem's balance.



    ==========================================================================
    By conducting extensive literature searches, Sanderson and Alexander
    discovered that infectious disease-induced mass mortality events occurred
    in 14 percent of marine mammal species between 1955 and 2018. Viruses
    were responsible for 72 percent of these events and caused 20 times the
    number of deaths than bacterial outbreaks. Specifically, morbillivirus
    and influenza A outbreaks were the most commonly recorded. Due to their
    life cycles, both viruses can infect multiple hosts since they have the potential to be transmitted between various species.

    To determine which factors influenced the occurrence of infectious
    disease- induced mass mortality events in marine mammals, Sanderson and Alexander evaluated key life history traits and environmental variables.

    To evaluate the role of life history traits, they focused on sociality,
    trophic level (a species' position on the food chain), and habitat
    breadth. While sociality and trophic level did not appear to be
    associated with mass mortality events in marine mammals, habitat breadth
    did. More than half of the species experiencing mass mortality events
    were pinnipeds, an order of semi-aquatic species that includes seals,
    sea lions, and walruses.

    "Pinnipeds bridge the terrestrial and aquatic interfaces and may have
    a greater exposure to pathogens that occur across these land types,"
    Sanderson said. For instance, seals and sea lions are often observed on beaches, rocky shorelines, and docks, but they also spend a significant
    part of their lives in water.

    In contrast to life history traits, environmental variables -- such
    as season and sea surface temperature anomalies -- were significantly associated with disease outbreaks in marine mammals.



    ==========================================================================
    One of the most indicative measures of climate change is fluctuating sea surface temperatures. Sanderson and Alexander found that 61 percent of
    mass mortality events in marine mammals occurred during periods in which regional sea surface temperature anomalies occurred. The study suggested
    that the incident rate of an infectious disease-induced mass mortality
    event increases by nearly 12 percent for "every unit increase in global
    sea surface temperature anomalies." "As climate change intensifies,
    this may set off a complex chain of events that dramatically alter these ecosystems, affecting marine populations living in these environments,"
    said Alexander an affiliated faculty member of the Fralin Life Sciences Institute. Climate change effects on sea ice and ocean salinity also
    have implications for the spread of disease.

    In polar regions, sea ice is melting more quickly due to increasing air temperature, but various species of pinnipeds need sea ice to give birth,
    rest, mate, escape predators, and molt. As the ice melts away, pinnipeds
    are forced to congregate onto smaller, shrinking ice sheets. At higher densities, increased contact between individuals can allow pathogens to
    be transmitted more readily through a population and region.

    The chemical balance of the ocean is also changing. In polar regions,
    melting sea ice dilutes the salty ocean water in a process called
    freshening. This can result in decreased prey abundance, since species
    like fish, mollusks, and crustaceans are sensitive to small changes in
    the environment. With less food to feed on, marine mammals may suffer
    from nutritional stress, resulting in decreased immune function and a
    greater susceptibility to disease.

    "Marine mammals represent important sentinels of aquatic health by
    providing information essential for managing threats to these vulnerable ecosystems," said Sanderson. "Addressing the root causes of climate
    change will be of critical importance as we chart a path forward in
    managing these species." Of all the marine mammal species that suffered
    an infectious disease-induced mass mortality event, the study found that
    37 percent were listed as endangered or vulnerable to extinction.

    "This work underscores the critical threat infectious disease can pose
    to marine species and the potential importance of climate change as
    a wide reaching driver of this process. Here, our role is complex as
    we contribute directly to our changing climate, increasing pathogen
    pollution, and habitat degradation. But we also have the power to change things, address climate change, protect species and environments through
    effort and innovation - - humanity at its best," Alexander said.

    The National Science Foundation funded this research through the
    multi-agency Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases program.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Virginia_Tech. Note: Content may be
    edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Claire E. Sanderson, Kathleen A. Alexander. Unchartered waters:
    Climate
    change likely to intensify infectious disease outbreaks causing
    mass mortality events in marine mammals. Global Change Biology,
    2020; DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15163 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/06/200618073540.htm

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