T. Rowles1; J. Stein1; L. Hansen1; D.
Wilkinson1; C. Driscoll1; P. Becker2; S. Wise2;
L.Thorsteinson3; T. Lipscomb4; C. House5; S.
Jeffries6; D. Lambourn6
The Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response Program was developed under
Title TV of the Marine Mammal Protection Act as a response to the 1987-88 Atlantic bottlenose
dolphin die-off. This multi-agency program has developed a bio-monitoring component, an archival
component, a stranding component, an unusual mortality response component and a Quality assurance
component to address the issues of marine mammal population health. The basic parameters
evaluated include incidence and types of disease, incidence of serious injury and mortality
related to human interactions, and levels and effects of contaminants. Bio-monitoring and
archival samples are collected from animals taken incidentally in commercial fisheries, taken in
Native American subsistence hunts, live captured and released and from stranded animals. Once a
problem is identified through the bio-monitoring component, specific aspects of the program are
designed to characterize the problem and investigate unusual events or mortalities which impact
marine mammal populations. The information gained from this program is used for management
decisions by NMFS and FWS who serve as the stewards of marine mammals and their environment.
Marine mammal stranding networks have been established in each of the NMFS
regions and consist primarily of volunteers who respond both to live and dead strandings. In
1995, network members reported 898 cetacean strandings and 1973 pinniped strandings. More live
strandings of single cetaceans were recorded in 1995 due, in part, to the increased efforts of
stranding volunteers to respond more quickly to events and to increased reporting of strandings
to the volunteers. The total number of reported strandings (live and dead) was the lowest of any
year since 1990. Among the interesting trends is a continuing increase in the number of arctic
seals stranding in the Northeast region of the United States. In particular the number of harp
seals has risen dramatically from a 1989 level of 3 to the current 1995 level of 78. This
increase may reflect an expansion of the range and numbers for some seal species. Evidence of
human interactions such as gun-shots, entanglement in fishing gear, mutilation, boat strikes, and
entrainment in nuclear power plants were reported. Of the total 213 animals which showed strong
evidence of human interactions, 80 were fisheries related, 14 were ship strikes, 54 were shot, 13
were mutilations, 7 were debris entanglement and ingestion, 27 were entrainments and 4 were
other. In 1995 no unusual mortality event involving marine mammals was noted. Investigations are
still continuing regarding the increase in humpback whale strandings in the mid-Atlantic.
Live animal capture and release methods are used to assess the relative
health and reproductive status of dolphin populations and to identify populations at risk. The
goals of this project are to characterize the overall health of the coastal stocks, and provide
quantitative estimates of the level of indirect human-induced mortality and the impacts of
contaminants on the reproductive rate. Ultimately this information will be used with incidental
take data to accurately assess stock status, predict recovery times and to identify stocks which
may become depleted due to the impacts of contaminants on health and productivity. To this end,
comprehensive health assessments of coastal bottlenose dolphins have been conducted at two sites:
one in the Gulf of Mexico (36 animals) and one in the mid-Atlantic (31 animals). A workshop was
conducted in 1993 to develop a quantitative model of health assessment and this model is being
tested and refined. Parameters collected/analyzed in the assessment protocols include: CBC,
serology, blood chemistries, skin/blubber biopsies (for genetic and contaminant analyses),
cultures, urinalyses, ultrasonography (for examination of pathology and reproduction), body
condition, and milk (for nutritional and contaminant analyses), immune function, and others.
Future plans include increasing the numbers of animals at each site and increasing the number of
sites evaluated.
In 1995, disease monitoring included serology screening, histopathology,
cultures and PCR from stranded, incidentally taken, subsistence or live capture animals. Serology
of free ranging harbor seals in southern Puget Sound showed positive antibody titers to Brucella
(12 of 62 samples) using three different techniques and also titers to Leptospira (24 of 62
samples). Serology testing for morbillivirus was performed on 306 pinniped and 51 cetacean
samples. Of note were two positive results in common dolphins in California. This was the first
report of morbillivirus in cetaceans in the north Pacific. One hundred forty animals were
evaluated for disease using histopathology or PCR. Of these 109 were cetaceans of 16 species and
31 were pinnipeds of 9 species. Histopathological evidence of 3 infectious diseases not
previously reported in the affected marine mammal species were found in stranded animals. There
were no histopathologically confirmed cases of morbilli-viral disease.
Bio-monitoring for contaminants and characterizations of previously noted
problems were performed. Over 420 tissue samples (blubber, liver, kidney, brain, muscle, heart,
melon, fat, blood, milk and stomach contents) from 16 species were collected or analyzed for
chlorinated hydrocarbons. An additional 200 samples from 9 species were analyzed for toxic and
essential elements. As expected significant differences were found in PCB levels in different
species and from different geographic regions. Comparisons of PCB and DDT levels in stranded
versus incidental caught common dolphins showed no marked differences. Cadmium levels in bowhead
whales were unexpectedly high for a species which feeds at lower trophic levels.
Method development and validation is another key component of the
bio-monitoring program. The program supported the development of methods to evaluate methyl
sulfones, improve analytical methods of assessing dioxin-like PCBs, improve methods for
evaluation of AC-DNA adducts, and increase the sensitivity of rapid chlorinated hydrocarbon
measurements.
The archival of tissues for retrospective analyses for contaminants and
disease is an important component in biological assessments. The National Marine Mammal Tissue
Bank in combination with the Alaska Marine Mammal Archival Project has archived tissues from 168
animals. These include samples (blubber, liver, and kidney) from 89 pinnipeds of 8 species and 79
cetaceans of 5 species. Of these samples, baseline levels of contaminants have been run on 115
tissues. Samples are available to researchers for retrospective studies. The program also has a
quality assurance (qa) component. It serves to provide performance comparability for the
bio-monitoring and the archiving work. Inter laboratory comparisons are performed to determine
the comparability of data. Standard reference materials from marine mammals are being developed.
A blubber SRM has been certified and is currently available. A liver SRM is under
development.
In summary, the MMHSRP is a multi-agency effort to provide baseline data on
health, human interactions and contaminants which may affect marine mammal populations. With such
assessments we can be more predictive in our decision making process and more responsive to
unusual mortality events. Additionally the program will allow us to evaluate long term trends in
population health and begin to look at correlations between anthropogenic factors, population
health, and the marine ecosystem.