Gas Bubble Disease in Harbour Porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) Stranded in British Columbia, May, 2010
IAAAM 2011
Stephen A. Raverty1,3; Lisa Spavin2; Paul Cottrell2; John Ford2; Anna Hall3; Joe Gaydos4; Martin Haulena3,5; Marina Ivančić6
1Animal Health Center, British Columbia Ministry of Agriculture and Lands, Abbotsford, BC, Canada; 2Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Nanaimo, BC, Canada; 3Marine Mammal Research Unit, Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; 4SeaDoc Society, University of California, Davis, Wildlife Health Center, Orcas Island Office, Eastsound, WA, USA; 5Vancouver Aquarium, Vancouver, BC, Canada; 6AquaVetRad, Vancouver, BC, Canada

Abstract

Harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) are among the most abundant small cetaceans in the northeastern Pacific and there is a distinct bimodal seasonal stranding trend. Increased numbers of animals present in late April to mid May with fewer individuals stranding late August through to mid September. The cause of this temporal pattern is unknown. In May, 2010, nine harbour porpoises stranded in a four day span along the southeast coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia. All were adults, well fleshed and in good post mortem condition. There was no indication of human interaction. Six animals presented with pulmonary edema, two featured multifocal subcutaneous and muscular hemorrhage along the torso and two had healed rib fractures. Due to the acute deaths and clustered stranding in a geographical area, MR and CT scans were undertaken on the heads of 5 animals. Three individuals had extensive stippled hypoattenuating foci consistent with gas (-340 to -955HU) evident along the hypodermis/muscle interface along the dorsal margin of the head, within the melon, the calvarial vault, the globes, the retrobulbar tissues, throughout the mandibular fat, lateral to the hemimandibles, and within the soft tissues rostromedial and dorsal to the bullae. On gross dissection and reflection of the calvarium, gas was evident within the meningeal vasculature and histopathology of the acoustic fat revealed focal distension of blood vessels with clear, uni to multiloculated clear intravascular foci (gas) with scattered acute perivascular hemorrhage. Follow up whole body CT scan of a code 3 harbor porpoise in Puget Sound, WA disclosed subcutaneous gas near the blowhole and to a much lesser extent along the torso. Similar findings of gas bubble disease have been observed in a number of geographic regions1-3 and this is believed to be the first case series in the northeastern Pacific Ocean. No strandings could be linked to anthropogenic causes.

References

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2.  Moore MJ, Bogomolni AL, Dennison SE, Early G, Garner MM, Hayward BA, Lentell BJ, Rotstein DS. Gas bubbles in seals, dolphins, and porpoises entangled and drowned at depth in gillnets. Vet Pathol 2009; 46(3): 536–547.

3.  Yang WC, Chou LS, Jepson PD, Brownell RL Jr, Cowan D, Chang PH, Chiou HI, Yao CJ, Yamada TK, Chiu JT, Wang PJ, Fernández A. Unusual cetacean mortality event in Taiwan, possibly linked to naval activities. Vet Rec 2008; 162(6): 184–186.

 

Speaker Information
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Marina Ivancic
AquaVetRad
Vancouver, BC, Canada


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