Date:
June 18, 2020
Source:
Virginia Tech
As the
COVID-19 pandemic sweeps across the globe, people are beginning to understand,
at a very personal level, the ways in which infectious diseases can devastate
life. But disease outbreaks are not confined to just humans or to life on land.
"We
are perhaps more alert than ever to the catastrophic impacts of infectious
disease in both humans and animals. Our task now is to begin to understand what
drives these events, particularly in species like marine mammals, where our
knowledge is even more limited," said Claire Sanderson, a research
associate in the Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation within the
College of Natural Resources and Environment and the research coordinator of
the Center for African Resources: Animals, Communities, and Land Use (CARACAL).
In 2000,
over 10,000 endangered Caspian seals died in less than a four-month span.
Researchers later discovered that the culprit behind this devastating mass
mortality event was canine distemper virus.
Infectious
disease-induced mass mortality events are known to afflict a variety of
species, including invertebrates, birds, fish, and both land and aquatic
mammals. However, these events in aquatic mammals are understudied compared to
their land-dwelling counterparts.
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