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Infectious disease found in Hawaiʻi dolphin could spark mass marine mammal deaths

08.09.21 | University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Link to video and sound (details below): https://bit.ly/3zvHxRe

WHAT: After two years of investigating the cause of death of a Fraser’s dolphin that was stranded on Maui in 2018, researchers discovered a novel strain of morbillivirus, a marine mammal disease responsible for deadly outbreaks among dolphins and whales worldwide. The University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Health and Stranding Lab conducted the necropsy (an animal autopsy) and published the report of the morbillivirus discovery. It is the first linked to this dolphin species.

WHO: Kristi West , associate researcher at UH Mānoa’s Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology who directs the Health and Stranding Lab.

WHERE: UH Mānoa Health and Stranding Lab

HOW: The discovery led to a suite of independent tests (immunohistochemistry, culturing of the virus and transmission electron microscopy) to confirm the finding and understand the role of this distinct morbillivirus in the pathology of the Fraser's dolphin. The UH Health and Stranding Lab only recovers less than 5% of the dolphins and whales that die in Hawaiian waters, which makes detecting disease outbreaks very difficult.

WHY : The finding alerts scientists and marine wildlife managers to the potential for a novel morbillivirus outbreak in Hawaiʻi’s dolphins and whales. The next step in determining if this virus is circulating in the Central Pacific is to focus on antibody testing of Hawaiian dolphins and whales. Further research would aid in evaluating the vulnerability of Hawaiian species to the novel Fraser’s morbillivirus.

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OTHER FACTS:

VIDEO BROLL: (1 minute, 54 seconds)

0:00-1:48 - students and researchers working at the UH Mānoa Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Lab

1:48-1:54 - photo of Fraser’s dolphins (photo credit: Brittany D. Guenther/Cascadia Research)

SOUNDBITES:

Kristi West, UH Health and Stranding Lab, Lab Director (10 seconds)

“The 2018 stranding of the Fraser's dolphin revealed that we have a novel and very divergent strain of morbillivirus here in Hawaiian waters that we were previously unaware of.”

West (11 seconds)

“Morbillivirus is an infectious disease that has been responsible for mass mortalities of dolphins and whales worldwide. It is related to human measles and smallpox.”

West (12 seconds)

“It’s also significant to us here in Hawaiʻi because we have many other species of dolphins and whales—about 20 species that call Hawaiʻi home—that may also be vulnerable to an outbreak from this virus.”

Scientific Reports

Case study

Animals

Novel cetacean morbillivirus in a rare Fraser’s dolphin (Lagenodelphis hosei) stranding from Maui, Hawai‘i

9-Aug-2021

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Hawaii at Manoa. (2021, August 9). Infectious disease found in Hawaiʻi dolphin could spark mass marine mammal deaths. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1WRR5ZML/infectious-disease-found-in-hawaii-dolphin-could-spark-mass-marine-mammal-deaths.html
MLA:
"Infectious disease found in Hawaiʻi dolphin could spark mass marine mammal deaths." Brightsurf News, Aug. 9 2021, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1WRR5ZML/infectious-disease-found-in-hawaii-dolphin-could-spark-mass-marine-mammal-deaths.html.