Sick Alaska Seal Shows Possible Spread Of Disease
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this Feb. 29, 2012 photo provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, a ringed seal is shown in Yakutat, Alaska. U.S. wildlife officials say a sick ringed seal that was captured in southeast Alaska last week appears to be afflicted by the same symptoms suffered last year by ringed seals and Pacific walrus along northern coastlines. (AP Photo/NOAA, Bill Lucey)(Credit: AP)ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Federal scientists said Wednesday that a nearly bald, lethargic seal recovered from the southeast Alaska coast showed the same symptoms of a disease that sickened ringed seals and Pacific walrus on the state’s north coast last year.
Fishermen last week spotted the seal near Yakutat at the top of the Alaska Panhandle, where it was captured and taken to Anchorage. The seal was determined to be so ill that it was euthanized.
Believed to be a ringed seal, it suffered symptoms similar to the ones found in 60 dead seals and 75 diseased seals that were discovered along the Beaufort and Chukchi seas of northern and northwest Alaska beginning in July, according to a National Marine Fisheries Service statement. The areas where the latest animal and the seals were found last year are separated by thousands of miles of water.
“The seal, determined to be a yearling, exhibited almost total hair loss and nodular, ulcerated scabbed skin sores,” said veterinary pathologist Kathy Burek-Huntington, who is part of an international group of experts working to the disease’s cause. “These sores are consistent with the disease process we have been seeing in the ice seals in the North Slope and Bering Strait areas.”
Most of the sickened animals were ringed seals but include 11 spotted seals and eight bearded seals, said Julie Speegle, a spokeswoman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Diseased ringed seals also were found last year in Canada and Russia.
Ringed seals are named for ring-patterns found on their fur. They are one of five ice-dependent seals in Alaska, with a range only as far south as the northern Bering Sea. The smallest of Alaska’s ice seals, they are the main prey of polar bears. They’re also the only type of seal that can live in seawater completely covered by ice, using stout front claws to dig breathing holes.
When snow covers the holes, ringed seals dig out lairs and give birth on ice. Pups are born without a thick blubber layer and must live on ice. Polar bears gorge on ringed seal pups during the spring, often capturing them by collapsing lairs.
NOAA is considering listing ringed seals as a threatened species because of projected loss of snow cover and sea ice from climate warming.
A DNA sample of the Yakutat seal will be tested to confirm that it was a ringed seal. Its blubber thickness indicated it was in good body shape.




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