Fetal distress and in utero pneumonia in perinatal dolphins during the Northern Gulf of Mexico unusual mortality event

KM Colegrove(Marine Mammal Center), Stephanie Venn‐Watson(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Jenny A. Litz(Marine Mammal Center), MJ Kinsel(Marine Mammal Center), KA Terio(Florida Institute of Technology), Erin Fougeres(Florida Institute of Technology), Ruth Y. Ewing(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), D. Ann Pabst(Florida Institute of Technology), WA McLellan(Florida Institute of Technology), Stephen Raverty(Florida Institute of Technology), Jeremiah T. Saliki(University of Georgia), Spencer E. Fire(NOAA National Ocean Service), Gina Rappucci(NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service Southeast Fisheries Science Center), S Bowen-Stevens(NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service Southeast Fisheries Science Center), Leslie R. Noble(NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service Southeast Fisheries Science Center), Alex Costidis(Marine Mammal Center), M Barbieri(NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service), Cara L. Field(Audubon Nature Institute), Susan M. Smith(Audubon Nature Institute), Ruth H. Carmichael(Dauphin Island Sea Lab), Connie Chevis(Institute for Marine Mammal Studies), W Hatchett(Institute for Marine Mammal Studies), Daniel C. Shannon(Institute for Marine Mammal Studies), Mandy C. Tumlin(Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries), Gretchen Lovewell(Mote Marine Laboratory), Wayne E. McFee(NOAA National Ocean Service), TK Rowles(NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service)
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms
January 29, 2016
Cited by 72Open Access
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Abstract

An unusual mortality event (UME) involving primarily common bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus of all size classes stranding along coastal Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, USA, started in early 2010 and continued into 2014. During this northern Gulf of Mexico UME, a distinct cluster of perinatal dolphins (total body length <115 cm) stranded in Mississippi and Alabama during 2011. The proportion of annual dolphin strandings that were perinates between 2009 and 2013 were compared to baseline strandings (2000-2005). A case-reference study was conducted to compare demographics, histologic lesions, and Brucella sp. infection prevalence in 69 UME perinatal dolphins to findings from 26 reference perinates stranded in South Carolina and Florida outside of the UME area. Compared to reference perinates, UME perinates were more likely to have died in utero or very soon after birth (presence of atelectasis in 88 vs. 15%, p < 0.0001), have fetal distress (87 vs. 27%, p < 0.0001), and have pneumonia not associated with lungworm infection (65 vs. 19%, p = 0.0001). The percentage of perinates with Brucella sp. infections identified via lung PCR was higher among UME perinates stranding in Mississippi and Alabama compared to reference perinates (61 vs. 24%, p = 0.01), and multiple different Brucella omp genetic sequences were identified in UME perinates. These results support that from 2011 to 2013, during the northern Gulf of Mexico UME, bottlenose dolphins were particularly susceptible to late-term pregnancy failures and development of in utero infections including brucellosis.


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