Marine Mammal Strandings

Since the 1980s, there has been growing concern about the health of marine mammal populations in coastal waters and in particular with respect to a decline in harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) numbers. A variety of possible causes have been proposed including infectious diseases, changes in food...

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Main Authors: Rogan, E, Penrose, R, Gassner, I, Mackey, M J, Clayton, P
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Marine Institute 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10793/556
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spelling ftmarineinst:oai:oar.marine.ie:10793/556 2023-05-15T16:33:29+02:00 Marine Mammal Strandings Rogan, E Penrose, R Gassner, I Mackey, M J Clayton, P 2001-12 http://hdl.handle.net/10793/556 en eng Marine Institute Maritime Ireland/Wales INTERREG Report;8 Rogan, E., Penrose, R., Gassner, I., Mackey, M.J. & Clayton, P., "Marine Mammal Strandings", Maritime Ireland/Wales INTERREG Report, Marine Institute 2001 1393-9025 http://hdl.handle.net/10793/556 INTERREG Monograph 2001 ftmarineinst 2022-07-27T09:39:05Z Since the 1980s, there has been growing concern about the health of marine mammal populations in coastal waters and in particular with respect to a decline in harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) numbers. A variety of possible causes have been proposed including infectious diseases, changes in food supply, pollution and entanglement in fishing gear. Recent studies linking contaminant data with disease levels in cetaceans suggest that higher contaminant levels are generally found in animals with a higher number of diseases i.e. that chronic exposure to PCBs or trace metals negatively influences the health status of some cetacean species by predisposing individuals to mortality associated with infectious disease (Jepson et al., 1999; Siebert et al., 1999). The reverse may also be true, that high levels of disease may disable the animal to the extent that coping with contaminants is not possible and toxins accumulate. The potentially serious role of infectious disease was demonstrated by the phocine distemper epidemic of 1987, which killed approximately 18,000 common seals (Phoca vitulina) in the North Sea and adjacent waters (Kennedy, 1990) and by the subsequent morbillivirus epidemic in striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba) in the Mediterranean sea (Domingo et al., 1990). Rejinders (1986) and Brouwer et al. (1989) demonstrated that feeding captive common seals with fish caught in highly polluted waters had deleterious effects on their health and there was speculation that pollution may have been a factor in the severity of these epidemics (Aguilar and Raga, 1990, Aguilar and Borrell, 1994, deSwart et al., 1994). Relatively little work on the health status and contaminant loadings in cetacean and pinniped populations in the Irish Sea has been undertaken to date (e.g., Morris et al., 1989, Law et al., 1995, Berrow et al., 1998a). Given the need for such data from relatively "high-medium" polluted waters (e.g., the Irish Sea) such a data collection programme is highly desirable. For a large number of cetacean and ... Book Harbour porpoise Phoca vitulina Phocoena phocoena Marine Institute Open Access Repository Siebert ENVELOPE(-63.033,-63.033,-64.817,-64.817)
institution Open Polar
collection Marine Institute Open Access Repository
op_collection_id ftmarineinst
language English
topic INTERREG
spellingShingle INTERREG
Rogan, E
Penrose, R
Gassner, I
Mackey, M J
Clayton, P
Marine Mammal Strandings
topic_facet INTERREG
description Since the 1980s, there has been growing concern about the health of marine mammal populations in coastal waters and in particular with respect to a decline in harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) numbers. A variety of possible causes have been proposed including infectious diseases, changes in food supply, pollution and entanglement in fishing gear. Recent studies linking contaminant data with disease levels in cetaceans suggest that higher contaminant levels are generally found in animals with a higher number of diseases i.e. that chronic exposure to PCBs or trace metals negatively influences the health status of some cetacean species by predisposing individuals to mortality associated with infectious disease (Jepson et al., 1999; Siebert et al., 1999). The reverse may also be true, that high levels of disease may disable the animal to the extent that coping with contaminants is not possible and toxins accumulate. The potentially serious role of infectious disease was demonstrated by the phocine distemper epidemic of 1987, which killed approximately 18,000 common seals (Phoca vitulina) in the North Sea and adjacent waters (Kennedy, 1990) and by the subsequent morbillivirus epidemic in striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba) in the Mediterranean sea (Domingo et al., 1990). Rejinders (1986) and Brouwer et al. (1989) demonstrated that feeding captive common seals with fish caught in highly polluted waters had deleterious effects on their health and there was speculation that pollution may have been a factor in the severity of these epidemics (Aguilar and Raga, 1990, Aguilar and Borrell, 1994, deSwart et al., 1994). Relatively little work on the health status and contaminant loadings in cetacean and pinniped populations in the Irish Sea has been undertaken to date (e.g., Morris et al., 1989, Law et al., 1995, Berrow et al., 1998a). Given the need for such data from relatively "high-medium" polluted waters (e.g., the Irish Sea) such a data collection programme is highly desirable. For a large number of cetacean and ...
format Book
author Rogan, E
Penrose, R
Gassner, I
Mackey, M J
Clayton, P
author_facet Rogan, E
Penrose, R
Gassner, I
Mackey, M J
Clayton, P
author_sort Rogan, E
title Marine Mammal Strandings
title_short Marine Mammal Strandings
title_full Marine Mammal Strandings
title_fullStr Marine Mammal Strandings
title_full_unstemmed Marine Mammal Strandings
title_sort marine mammal strandings
publisher Marine Institute
publishDate 2001
url http://hdl.handle.net/10793/556
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.033,-63.033,-64.817,-64.817)
geographic Siebert
geographic_facet Siebert
genre Harbour porpoise
Phoca vitulina
Phocoena phocoena
genre_facet Harbour porpoise
Phoca vitulina
Phocoena phocoena
op_relation Maritime Ireland/Wales INTERREG Report;8
Rogan, E., Penrose, R., Gassner, I., Mackey, M.J. & Clayton, P., "Marine Mammal Strandings", Maritime Ireland/Wales INTERREG Report, Marine Institute 2001
1393-9025
http://hdl.handle.net/10793/556
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