Huckabone Sara E, Gulland Frances M D, Johnson Suzanne M, Colegrove Kathleen M, Dodd Erin M, Pappagianis Demosthenes, Dunkin Robin C, Casper David, Carlson Erin L, Sykes Jane E, Meyer Weiland, Miller Melissa A
1 Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine, New York 366, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA.
J Wildl Dis. 2015 Apr;51(2):295-308. doi: 10.7589/2014-06-143. Epub 2015 Feb 3.
A wide range of systemic mycoses have been reported from captive and wild marine mammals from North America. Examples include regionally endemic pathogens such as Coccidioides and Blastomyces spp., and novel pathogens like Cryptococcus gattii, which appear may have been introduced to North America by humans. Stranding and necropsy data were analyzed from three marine mammal stranding and response facilities on the central California coast to assess the prevalence, host demographics, and lesion distribution of systemic mycoses affecting locally endemic marine mammals. Between 1 January 1998 and 30 June 2012, >7,000 stranded marine mammals were necropsied at the three facilities. Necropsy and histopathology records were reviewed to identify cases of locally invasive or systemic mycoses and determine the nature and distribution of fungal lesions. Forty-one animals (0.6%) exhibited cytological, culture- or histologically confirmed locally invasive or systemic mycoses: 36 had coccidioidomycosis, two had zygomycosis, two had cryptococcosis, and one was systemically infected with Scedosporium apiospermum (an Ascomycota). Infected animals included 18 California sea lions (Zalophus californianus), 20 southern sea otters (Enhydra lutris nereis), two Pacific harbor seals (Phoca vitulina richardsi), one Dall's porpoise (Phocoenoides dalli), and one northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris). Coccidioidomycosis was reported from 15 sea lions, 20 sea otters, and one harbor seal, confirming that Coccidioides spp. is the most common pathogen causing systemic mycosis in marine mammals stranding along the central California coast. We also report the first confirmation of C. gattii infection in a wild marine mammal from California and the first report of coccidioidomycosis in a wild harbor seal. Awareness of these pathogenic fungi during clinical care and postmortem examination is an important part of marine mammal population health surveillance and human health protection. Temporal-spatial overlap may be observed for pathogenic mycoses infecting coastal marine mammals and adjacent human populations.
北美圈养和野生海洋哺乳动物身上已报告出现多种全身性真菌病。例如,包括球孢子菌属和芽生菌属等局部地区流行的病原体,以及可能已由人类引入北美的新型病原体,如加氏隐球菌。对加利福尼亚州中部海岸的三个海洋哺乳动物搁浅及应对设施的搁浅和尸检数据进行了分析,以评估影响当地特有海洋哺乳动物的全身性真菌病的患病率、宿主人口统计学特征和病变分布情况。在1998年1月1日至2012年6月30日期间,这三个设施对7000多头搁浅的海洋哺乳动物进行了尸检。对尸检和组织病理学记录进行了审查,以确定局部侵袭性或全身性真菌病病例,并确定真菌病变的性质和分布。41只动物(0.6%)表现出经细胞学、培养或组织学确诊的局部侵袭性或全身性真菌病:36只患有球孢子菌病,2只患有接合菌病,2只患有隐球菌病,1只被尖端赛多孢子菌(一种子囊菌)全身感染。受感染的动物包括18只加利福尼亚海狮(加州海狮)、20只南海獭(海獭指名亚种)、2只太平洋港海豹(里氏海豹)、1只戴尔鼠海豚(白腰鼠海豚)和1只北象海豹(长吻海象)。在15只海狮、20只海獭和1只港海豹中报告了球孢子菌病,证实球孢子菌属是导致加利福尼亚州中部海岸搁浅的海洋哺乳动物全身性真菌病的最常见病原体。我们还首次证实了加利福尼亚野生海洋哺乳动物感染了加氏隐球菌,以及野生港海豹感染球孢子菌病的首例报告。在临床护理和尸检过程中认识到这些致病真菌,是海洋哺乳动物种群健康监测和人类健康保护的重要组成部分。感染沿海海洋哺乳动物和邻近人群的致病性真菌病可能会出现时空重叠。