Pilot Whale Morbillivirus Infection: New Insights on Cetacean Morbilliviruses and Odontocete Mass
Padraig J. Duignan; Joseph R. Geraci
Department of Pathology, Ontario Veterinary College, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario,
Canada
We have detected serologic evidence of morbillivirus infection in 14 of 18 odontocete species from
the western Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico. For all animals, antibody titers were similar against porpoise morbillivirus (PMV)
and dolphin morbillivirus (DMV) and higher than those against any other morbillivirus. Immunoprecipitation studies using
radio-labeled canine distemper virus antigen and serum from ten cetacean species were carried out to determine the
specificity of the immune response. A retrospective serologic study was carried out on long-finned (n = 99) and
short-finned (n = 25) pilot whales (Globicephala melas and G. macrorhynchus) stranded in 19 events between
1982 and 1994. In addition, a blood sample was obtained from a free-ranging long-finned pilot whale by-caught in fishing
gear. Tissues were collected from 24 stranded G. melas and 15 G. macrorhynchus for histo-pathology and
immuno-histochemistry. Morbillivirus neutralizing antibodies were found in 92% of G. melas and 64% of G.
macrorhynchus. Serum from sero-positive whales showed precipitation of the nucleocapsid (N) protein of CDV
confirming exposure to a morbillivirus. Seroprevalence was similar between age classes and sexes and the earliest evidence
of infection was in a long-finned pilot whale that stranded in 1982. Clinical disease consistent with morbillivirus
pneumonia was detected in a G. melas calf stranded on Cape Cod in September 1989. Immunoperoxidase staining
confirmed that morbillivirus antigen was present in the lung lesions. Stable antibody titers were observed in juvenile
pilot whales under rehabilitation for up to 8 months.
Our data suggest that morbillivirus infection is enzootic among pilot whales. We propose that the
population size, social structure, and migration patterns of pilot whales facilitate maintenance of infection. Furthermore,
through mixing with other odontocetes, they could act as vectors of infection both in the wild and in captivity. We
encourage the investigation of clinical morbillivirus infection as a possible cause of mass strandings among highly social
odontocetes.