Date: 22/12/2020 14:30:03
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1668825
Subject: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins


Dolphins that inhabit coastal areas can be susceptible to a condition known as freshwater skin disease, and a new study has found climate change to be an important factor

In 2005, scientists began to notice a peculiar skin condition in coastal dolphin populations, one that was soon found to cover as much as 70 percent of their bodies and could prove fatal. A new study has found the increasing frequency and severity of storms as a result of climate change to be a key factor in this novel disease, by drastically altering the salinity of the waters the animals inhabit.

Climate change is reshaping the Earth’s weather systems and strengthening storms are one consequence of this new world we live in. Studies have shown how increasing heat in the upper layer of the ocean is contributing to more powerful hurricanes, while reports from the World Meteorological Organization have demonstrated how extreme weather events like cyclones and heavy rainfall are gaining in frequency across the globe.

One byproduct of this is the dumping of massive amounts of freshwater in otherwise salty waters, which causes rapid and significant decreases in salinity that can linger for months at a time. For dolphins that inhabit coastal areas, this means a sudden shift to foreign and unfavorable conditions, though scientists had not been able to draw a link between these climate change-related events and the well-being of the dolphins.

That was until a pair of recent and very similar mortality events took place in Australia across two different populations of coastal dolphins (https://www.scimex.org/newsfeed/dolphin-populations-likely-to-be-impacted-by-climate-change-and-extreme-weather-events), from which some distinct parallels could be drawn. Both groups of cetaceans exhibited patchy skin and lesions covering up to 70 percent of their body, bearing fungal and bacterial species and discoloration. Both outbreaks followed an “abrupt and marked decrease in salinity” due to rainfall in nearby catchments, with the conditions lasting from weeks to months.

This combination of pathology and environmental factors enabled the authors of the new study to create the first-ever case definition for so-called freshwater skin disease, and establish what they say is a link between the condition and climate change. The hope is that the research can better help professionals diagnose and treat dolphins impacted by the condition, which they anticipate will only become more common.

“This devastating skin disease has been killing dolphins since Hurricane Katrina, and we’re pleased to finally define the problem,” says study author Dr. Pádraig Duignan, Chief Pathologist at The Marine Mammal Center. “With a record hurricane season in the Gulf of Mexico this year and more intense storm systems worldwide due to climate change, we can absolutely expect to see more of these devastating outbreaks killing dolphins.”

https://newatlas.com/environment/freshwater-skin-disease-dolphins-climate-change/

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Date: 22/12/2020 15:41:37
From: roughbarked
ID: 1668864
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

Posted this earlier today. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-78858-2

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Date: 22/12/2020 15:46:30
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1668875
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

roughbarked said:


Posted this earlier today. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-78858-2

Would you please supply the post details?

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Date: 22/12/2020 15:49:45
From: roughbarked
ID: 1668878
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

PermeateFree said:


roughbarked said:

Posted this earlier today. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-78858-2

Would you please supply the post details?

Fresh water skin disease in dolphins: a case definition based on pathology and environmental factors in Australia.

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Date: 22/12/2020 15:51:15
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1668880
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

roughbarked said:


PermeateFree said:

roughbarked said:

Posted this earlier today. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-78858-2

Would you please supply the post details?

Fresh water skin disease in dolphins: a case definition based on pathology and environmental factors in Australia.

Fair enough, but where and when did you post the details.

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Date: 22/12/2020 15:52:17
From: roughbarked
ID: 1668881
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

PermeateFree said:


roughbarked said:

PermeateFree said:

Would you please supply the post details?

Fresh water skin disease in dolphins: a case definition based on pathology and environmental factors in Australia.

Fair enough, but where and when did you post the details.

In chat.

Reply Quote

Date: 22/12/2020 15:53:10
From: roughbarked
ID: 1668883
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

roughbarked said:


PermeateFree said:

roughbarked said:

Fresh water skin disease in dolphins: a case definition based on pathology and environmental factors in Australia.

Fair enough, but where and when did you post the details.

In chat.

https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/1668776/

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Date: 22/12/2020 15:58:20
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1668887
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

roughbarked said:


roughbarked said:

PermeateFree said:

Fair enough, but where and when did you post the details.

In chat.

https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/1668776/

From: roughbarked
ID: 1668776
Subject: re: December Chat
FWSD

And you reckoned that the above post of yours amounts to providing details? Sorry, but imo that falls a very long way short.

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Date: 22/12/2020 16:02:01
From: The Rev Dodgson
ID: 1668890
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

roughbarked said:


roughbarked said:

PermeateFree said:

Fair enough, but where and when did you post the details.

In chat.

https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/1668776/

Thanks for the link.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-78858-2

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Date: 22/12/2020 16:06:04
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1668892
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

The Rev Dodgson said:


roughbarked said:

roughbarked said:

In chat.

https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/posts/1668776/

Thanks for the link.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-78858-2

Surprised you didn’t find when he originally posted it, but there again you seldom read his posts.

Reply Quote

Date: 23/12/2020 09:00:36
From: Peak Warming Man
ID: 1669277
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

I read that article yesterday and like everyone else I’m keen to link and highlight everything to global warming but even I was struggling to see even a tenuous link to the dolphin woes.

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Date: 23/12/2020 09:02:26
From: The Rev Dodgson
ID: 1669280
Subject: re: Scientists link increasing storms to mystery skin disease in dolphins

Peak Warming Man said:


I read that article yesterday and like everyone else I’m keen to link and highlight everything to global warming but even I was struggling to see even a tenuous link to the dolphin woes.

I don’t believe everything stated above.

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