Abstract
In 1988, ten carcasses of stranded beluga whales from the polluted St.
Lawrence River were necropsied. Some lesions were commonly seen, like gastric Ulcerations and
erosions, digestive parasitism, pneumonias and mammary gland problems. We also found some
tumors. The common findings in the carcasses examined are the high levels of contaminants,
mostly organochlorines, whose effects have been well studied. Many of the lesions observed in
the beluga whale population of the St. Lawrence River could be related to the toxicity of the
chronic exposure to organochloric contaminants.
A distinct population of about 500 beluga whales lives in the estuary of
the St. Lawrence River, They don't migrate or mix with any other population. When those
whales die and strand ashore, they are reported to us by the residents. We go get the
carcasses and carry them to the necropsy room of the Veterinary Medicine School of Montreal
University, in St. Hyacinthe where the necropsy is performed. We routinely make gross
necropsy, with histopathology, bacteriology, virology, parasitology and toxicology.
The necropsy results showed lesions on the skin, in the digestive tract
in the mouth stomach and intestine, in the lungs, liver, spleen, urinary bladder, adrenals,
mammary glands, testis. Those lesions are associated with bacteria, which are mostly
opportunistic ones, parasites of all kinds, or neoplastic. III tact, we found many extensive
infections, and three malignant and three benign tumors on ten animals. Such lesions strongly
suggest immunosuppression.
Toxicological analysis revealed high concentrations of industrial and
agricultural contaminants, mostly organochlorines with heavy metals. Those mostly considered
are PCB, which are found at high levels, are increasing with age, and are higher in males
than in females who nurse their calf; PCB which are liposoluble pass through the milk which
contains about 45% fat. The calves themselves receive very large amounts of contaminants in
their first months of life, so they can be very heavily contaminated.
We know the effects of PCB on laboratory animals, because it was the
easiest way to study them. We know they can affect the liver, functionally and structurally,
and we had liver lesions. We know they can cause atrophy of the thymus and spleen; we found
only one thymus on ten animals, although we had a few young ones, and we also found two
atrophied and fibrosed spleens. Immunologic impairment caused by PCB is the most important
effect suspected on beluga whales of the St. Lawrence, given all the lesions, the bacteria
and the tumors we found. Hormonal imbalance is known to happen with thyroid hormones and
estrogens whose metabolism is impaired. Estrogen problems can lead to reproductive
inefficiency.
The small population of the St. Lawrence does not enlarge even though
hunting stopped many years ago, and we suspect such a reproductive inefficiency. We also
suspect a cortisol imbalance with the adrenal lesions we found and the gastric ulcers that
could also result from vitamin A deficiency, another effect of PCB, that weaken the
epithelium.
PCB is also known to cause skin lesions, and weight loss. About their
carcinogenic effect, we now know that PCB are not mutagens, but they are promoters of tumors,
meaning that if a mutation occurs, they will "encourage" it to develop as a
tumor.
In conclusion, the adverse effects of contaminants taken one by one have
been proven on laboratory animals. The effects of a mixture of them at high levels on a
population of beluga whales will be very hard to prove scientifically, but we have strong
reasons to think this could be so given the wide variety of lesions that suggest some level
of immunosuppression.