PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stranded orcas hold critical clues for scientists

Killer-whale necropsies boost understanding of the species

2013-06-07
(Press-News.org) The development of a standardized killer-whale necropsy system has boosted the complete data from killer-whale strandings from 2 percent to about 33 percent, according to a recent study from a team of scientists, including a University of California, Davis wildlife veterinarian.

The study, published recently in the journal Marine Mammal Science, suggests that the data can help scientists better understand the life history of the orca species.

The killer-whale necropsy system was co-developed by Joe Gaydos, director of the SeaDoc Society -- a program of the UC Davis Wildlife Health Center within the School of Veterinary Medicine -- and Stephen Raverty, veterinary pathologist with the British Columbia Ministry of Agriculture.

"Because killer whales are apex predators and flagship conservation species, strandings are sad events," said Gaydos. "But this study confirms that if we make every effort to understand why the strandings occurred, we will ultimately improve the fate of the species."

Gaydos and Raverty developed the standardized killer-whale necropsy system in 2004. The analysis of strandings since then has shown that the protocol, along with increased funding for southern resident killer-whale recovery, has increased the collection of complete data from killer-whale strandings. Traditionally only one in 50 stranded whale cadavers would be analyzed; now one in three get a full examination.

The increased recovery funding was provided by the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service and Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

For the study, researchers analyzed North Pacific killer-whale strandings dating back to 1925. The report noted that while orcas are some of the most widely distributed whales on Earth, very few dead ones are ever found. Over the last two decades, an average of just 10 a year have been discovered stranded across the entire North Pacific Ocean.

"Each stranded orca should be viewed as a unique opportunity to enhance our understanding of this magnificent species," said co-author Raverty.

The study found that 88 percent of all reported killer-whale strandings are fatal, while only 12 percent of the stranded killer whales make it off the beach alive. The dead whales can provide critical clues to the species' overall life history, genetics, and health, as well as the causes of death. With such limited opportunity to do comprehensive sampling and studies, the authors noted the disturbing fact that, until recently, less than 2 percent of dead killer whales were thoroughly examined.

While the study was designed to look at stranding trends and did not evaluate the causes, necropsies on beached orcas have shown that they absorb extremely high loads of manmade toxins, suffer from infectious diseases and, in the case of fish-eating populations, depend primarily on severely depleted salmon stocks. With the standardized protocol now in place -- providing much more complete data on strandings -- researchers are getting a clearer picture of killer-whale life and death.

"This was a herculean effort to learn more about one of the ocean's top predators," said lead author Michelle Barbieri, a former SeaDoc Society scientist and UC Davis graduate who is currently the lead veterinarian for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Program.

"We could not have done this without the collaboration of dozens of killer-whale scientists from around the world, who provided stranding and population data from Washington, Oregon, California, Alaska, Hawaii, British Columbia, Mexico, Japan and Russia," she said.



INFORMATION:



More information:

Read the study: http://bit.ly/11njInA

Download killer Whale image by Joe Gaydos/SeaDoc: http://bit.ly/14jk7LV

Download stranded killer whale image: http://bit.ly/13odAi9



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Common genetic disease linked to father's age

2013-06-07
Scientists at USC have unlocked the mystery of why new cases of the genetic disease Noonan Syndrome are so common: a mutation that causes the disease disproportionately increases a normal father's production of sperm carrying the disease trait. When this Noonan syndrome mutation arises in a normal sperm stem cell it makes that cell more likely to reproduce itself than stem cells lacking the mutation. The father then is more likely to have an affected child because more mutant stem cells result in more mutant sperm. The longer the man waits to have children the greater ...

Making sense of patterns in the Twitterverse

2013-06-07
RICHLAND, Wash. – If you think keeping up with what's happening via Twitter, Facebook and other social media is like drinking from a fire hose, multiply that by 7 billion – and you'll have a sense of what Court Corley wakes up to every morning. Corley, a data scientist at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, has created a powerful digital system capable of analyzing billions of tweets and other social media messages in just seconds, in an effort to discover patterns and make sense of all the information. His social media analysis tool, dubbed ...

Magpies take decisions faster when humans look at them

2013-06-07
Researchers from the Seoul National University found that wild birds appear to "think faster" when humans, and possibly predators in general, are directly looking at them. "We started this study from our experience" says Dr. Sang-im Lee, the leader of magpie research team and the first author of the paper. "For a long time we had this impression that somehow magpies know that we are watching them because they often fly away from us when we observe them. But when we don't observe them, we can pass them pretty close-by but they don't fly away!" The finding that animals ...

Whispering light hears liquids talk

2013-06-07
Ever been to a whispering gallery—a quiet, circular space underneath an old cathedral dome that captures and amplifies sounds as quiet as a whisper? Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign are applying similar principles in the development optomechanical sensors that will help unlock vibrational secrets of chemical and biological samples at the nanoscale. "Optomechanics is an area of research in which extremely minute forces exerted by light (for example: radiation pressure, gradient force, electrostriction) are used to generate and control high-frequency ...

3 out of 20 scopes used to examine GI tracts and colons improperly cleaned

2013-06-07
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., June 7, 2013 - Three out of 20 flexible gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopes used for screening were found to harbor unacceptable levels of "bio dirt" – cells and matter from a patient's body that could pose potential infection risk -- according to a study of endoscopes used at five hospitals across the U.S. In an abstract to be presented at the 40th Annual Conference of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC), researchers in the 3M Infection Prevention Division analyzed 275 flexible duodenoscopes, gastroscopes, ...

Mandatory flu vaccination of healthcare personnel does not lead to worker exodus

2013-06-07
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., June 7, 2013 – Mandatory influenza (flu) vaccination, as a condition of employment, did not lead to excessive voluntary termination, according to a four-year analysis of vaccination rates at Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood, IL. Flu infections result in approximately 150,000 hospital admissions and 24,000 deaths annually.1 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that all healthcare personnel (HCP) receive the annual flu vaccine, yet the national average for HCP vaccination is only 64 percent. Infection control ...

Oh brother, where art thou?

2013-06-07
The results indicate that level of familiarity does not affect the stickleback's ability to recognize kin. Recognition based on phenotype matching or innate recognition thus seems to be the overruling mechanism when it comes to choosing members of a peer group. Numerous species, from microbes to humans and even plants, are able to distinguish relatives from others of their kind. However, it has proven remarkably difficult to uncover the underlying mechanisms. When family members remain together for life, it is likely that recognition of relatives is based on familiarity. ...

New research findings on onset of uterine fibroids provide potential for novel treatments

2013-06-07
Uterine leiomyomata, or fibroids, are benign tumours that nevertheless affect the health of millions of women. They may cause, for instance, pain, bleeding and infertility. Fibroids are also the most common reason for a hysterectomy; for example, some 8,000 hysterectomies are made in Finland each year. Scientists at the Academy of Finland's Centre of Excellence in Cancer Genetics Research have identified the molecular mechanisms underlying the onset of common leiomyomata. The results of their research were published in the top medical journal New England Journal of Medicine ...

'Long-awaited explanation' for mysterious effects in high-temperature superconductors

2013-06-07
A German-French research team has constructed a new model that explains how the so-called pseudogap state forms in high-temperature superconductors. The calculations predict two coexisting electron orders. Below a certain temperature, superconductors lose their electrical resistance and can conduct electricity without loss. "It is not to be excluded that the new pseudogap theory also provides the long-awaited explanation for why, in contrast to conventional metallic superconductors, certain ceramic copper oxide bonds lose their electrical resistance at such unusually high ...

Detection of apple juices and cereals which exceed permitted levels of mycotoxins

2013-06-07
VIDEO: This video discusses the detection of excessive levels of mycotoxins in apple juices and cereals. Click here for more information. Researchers from the University of Granada (Spain) have analysed the presence of patulin, a type of toxin produced by fungi, in several commercial apple juices. The results show that more than 50% of the samples analysed exceed the maximum limits laid down by law. They have also discovered a sample of rice with more mycotoxins than permitted. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Companies quietly switching out toxic product ingredients in response to California law

Can math save content creators? A new model proposes fairer revenue distribution methods for streaming services

Study examines grief of zoo employees and volunteers across the US after animal losses

National study underway to test new mechanical heart pump

Antarctica’s only native insect’s unique survival mechanism

How Earth's early cycles shaped the chemistry of life

Ukraine war forces planes to take longer routes, raising CO2

Negative refraction of light using atoms instead of metamaterials

High BP may develop at different ages and paces in East & South Asian adults in the UK

Meet the newly discovered brain cell that allows you to remember objects

Engineered animals show new way to fight mercury pollution

The 3,000-year coral reef shutdown: a mysterious pause and a remarkable recovery

Worm surface chemistry reveals secrets to their development and survival

Splicing twins: unravelling the secrets of the minor spliceosome complex

500-year-old Transylvanian diaries show how the Little Ice Age completely changed life and death in the region

Overcoming nicotine withdrawal: Clues found in neural mechanisms of the brain

Survey: Women prefer female doctors, but finding one for heart health can be difficult

Leaf color mysteries unveiled: the role of BoYgl-2 in cabbage

NUS Medicine study: Inability of cells to recycle fats can spell disease

D2-GCN: a graph convolutional network with dynamic disentanglement for node classification

Female hoverflies beat males on long-distance migrations

Study finds consumer openness to smoke-impacted wines, offering new market opportunities

Why we need to expand the search for climate-friendly microalgae

Fewer forest fires burn in North America today than in the past—and that's a bad thing

Older people in England are happier now than before the COVID pandemic, new national study suggests

Texas A&M chemist wins NSF CAREER Award

Micro-nano plastics make other pollutants more dangerous to plants and intestinal cells

Study of female genital tract reveals key findings

Pitt Engineering Professor Fang Peng elected to National Academy of Engineering

Short-course radiation therapy effective for endometrial cancer patients

[Press-News.org] Stranded orcas hold critical clues for scientists
Killer-whale necropsies boost understanding of the species