Translating Navy Marine Mammal Medicine into Conservation Medicine: A Historical Perspective
IAAAM 2022
Cynthia Smith1*; Forrest Gomez1; Barbara Linnehan1; Ashley Barratclough1; Jenny Meegan1; Abby McClain1; Lori Schwacke1; Sam Ridgway1,2
1National Marine Mammal Foundation, San Diego, CA, USA; 2US Navy Marine Mammal Program, NIWC Pacific, San Diego, CA, USA

Abstract

The U.S. Navy Marine Mammal Program has been caring for common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) and California sea lions (Zalophus californianus) for more than 60 years. Navy animals spend a portion of their time swimming freely in the open ocean, as part of operational training plans and in support of the animals’ health and welfare. When the animals are not at sea, they are cared for in open ocean enclosures, which are located in bays, sounds, and estuaries and co-inhabited by local marine life. Caring for the animals in this way has allowed veterinarians and scientists to continuously monitor animal health and behavior in a controlled, natural environment that closely mimics the living conditions of their wild counterparts. More than 1200 publications have resulted from the Navy’s program, ranging from discoveries regarding basic physiologic, acoustic, and anatomic adaptations to the ocean environment, to advanced diagnostic techniques for marine mammal healthcare. Much of the knowledge gained can be directly applied to the conservation of vulnerable, threatened, and endangered marine mammals. This has led to a rich history of translating Navy medicine into conservation tools, techniques, and strategies for wild marine mammals, facilitated through partnerships with nonprofit organizations, government agencies, private institutions, and universities. Over the years, direct applications have included conservation planning for endangered cetaceans such as the Yangtze river dolphin (Lipotes vexillifer) in China; medical database development for wild marine mammal populations such as the southern resident killer whale (Orcinus orca) in the U.S. Pacific Northwest; advancement of diagnostic techniques for application to field assessments of small cetaceans; health assessments of at-risk cetaceans including those impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the northern Gulf of Mexico; and the development of minimally invasive aging techniques to inform population assessments of marine mammals.1-10 We continue the tradition today, through our efforts to constantly improve the care provided to the Navy’s marine mammals and to apply the knowledge gained toward the conservation of at-risk marine mammals.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the veterinarians, technicians, medical records experts, and animal care and training teams that have contributed to the life-long care of the Navy’s animals over the past six decades. From our current collaborative team, we give special thanks to Mark Baird, Mark Beeler, Darin Bickel, Erin Brodie, Veronica Cendejas, Lisa Clowers, Risa Daniels, Randall Dear, Jennifer Dunham, Jammy Eichman, Jay Ferreri, Chris Hammell, Dorian Houser, Brittany Jones, Brittany Novick, Celeste Parry, Elaine Reiter, Jessica Sportelli, Sacha Stevenson, Ryan Takeshita, and Melissa Zirkle of the National Marine Mammal Foundation; MAJ Kyle Ross and MAJ Natalie Erker of the U.S. Army; and Braden Duryee, Jim Finneran, Christian Harris, Eric Jensen, Carolina LeBert, Betsy Lutmerding, and Mark Xitco of the U.S. Navy.

Literature Cited

1.  Ridgway SH, Norris KS, Cornell LH. 1989. Some considerations for those wishing to propagate platanistoid dolphins. In: Perrin WF, Brownell RL, Jr., Kaiya Z, & Jiankang L, editors. Biology and conservation of river dolphins. IUCN Species Survival Commission Occasional Papers, No. 3. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN. p 159–167.

2.  Emory-Gomez FM, Lutmerding BA, Clowers L, Daniels R, Smith CR, Barre L, Gilardi K, Venn-Watson S, Gaydos JK. 2019. Development of a killer whale health database to assess individual and population health of Southern Resident killer whales (Orcinus orca). IAAAM 68th Annual Conference Proceedings, Tahoe, CA.

3.  Ivančić M, Gomez FM, Musser WB, Barratclough A, Meegan JM, Waitt SM, Cárdenas Llerenas A, Jensen ED, Smith CR. 2020. Ultrasonographic findings associated with normal pregnancy and fetal well-being in the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). Vet Radiol Ultrasound 61(2):215–226.

4.  Linnehan BK, Hsu A, Gomez FM, Huston SM, Takeshita R, Colegrove KM, Rowles TK, Barratclough A, Musser WB, Harms CA, Cendejas V, Zolman ES, Balmer BC, Townsend FI, Wells RS, Jensen ED, Schwacke LH, Smith CR. 2020. Standardization of dolphin cardiac auscultation and characterization of heart murmurs in managed and free-ranging bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus). Front Vet Sci 28;7:570055.

5.  Smith CR, Solano M, Lutmerding BA Johnson SP, Meegan JM, Le-Bert CR, Emory-Gomez F, Cassle S, Carlin K, Jensen ED. 2012. Pulmonary ultrasound findings in a bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus population. Dis Aquat Org 101:243–255.

6.  Smith CR, Venn-Watson S, Wells RS, Johnson SP, Maffeo N, Balmer BC, Jensen ED, Townsend FI, Sakhaee K. 2013. Comparison of nephrolithiasis prevalence in two bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) populations. Front Endocrinol 16;4:145.

7.  Barratclough A, Wells RS, Schwacke LH, Rowles TK Gomez FM, Fauquier D, Sweeney J, Townsend FI, Hansen L, Zolman ES, Balmer BC, Smith CR. 2019. Health assessments of common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus): past, present, and potential conservation applications. Front Vet Sci 6:444.

8.  Schwacke LH, Smith CR, Townsend FI, Wells RS, Hart LB, Balmer BC, Collier TK, De Guise S, Fry MM, Guillette LJ, Lamb SV, Lane SM, McFee WE, Place NJ, Tumlin MC, Ylitalo GM, Zolman ES, Rowles TK. 2014. Health of common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in Barataria Bay, Louisiana, following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Environ Sci Technol 48(1), 93–103.

9.  Smith CR, Rowles TK, Hart LB, Townsend FI, Wells RS, Zolman ES, Balmer BC, Quigley B, Ivančić M, McKercher W, Tumlin MC, Mullin KD, Adams JD, Wu Q, McFee W, Collier TK, Schwacke LH. 2017. Slow recovery of Barataria Bay dolphin health following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (2013–2014), with evidence of persistent lung disease and impaired stress response. Endang Species Res 33:127–142.

10.  Barratclough A, Smith CR, Gomez FM, Photopoulou T, Takeshita R, Pirotta E, Thomas L, McClain AM, Parry C, Zoller JA, Horvath S, Schwacke LH. 2021. Accurate epigenetic aging in bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus), an essential step in the conservation of at-risk dolphins. J Zool Bot Gard 2(3):416–420.

Speaker Information
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Cynthia Smith
National Marine Mammal Foundation
San Diego, CA, USA


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