Womersley Freya, Hancock James, Perry Cameron T, Rowat David
Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, The Laboratory, Citadel Hill, Plymouth, PL1 2PB, UK.
Ocean and Earth Science, National Oceanography Centre Southampton, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK.
Conserv Physiol. 2021 Jan 16;9(1):coaa120. doi: 10.1093/conphys/coaa120. eCollection 2021.
Wound healing is important for marine taxa such as elasmobranchs, which can incur a range of natural and anthropogenic wounds throughout their life history. There is evidence that this group shows a high capacity for external wound healing. However, anthropogenic wounds may become more frequent due to increasing commercial and recreational marine activities. Whale sharks are particularly at risk of attaining injuries given their use of surface waters and wildlife tourism interest. There is limited understanding as to how whale sharks recover from injuries, and often insights are confined to singular opportunistic observations. The present study makes use of a unique and valuable photographic data source from two whale shark aggregation sites in the Indian Ocean. Successional injury-healing progression cases were reviewed to investigate the characteristics of injuries and quantify a coarse healing timeframe. Wounds were measured over time using an image standardization method. This work shows that by Day 25 major injury surface area decreased by an average of 56% and the most rapid healing case showed a surface area reduction of 50% in 4 days. All wounds reached a point of 90% surface area closure by Day 35. There were differences in healing rate based on wound type, with lacerations and abrasions taking 50 and 22 days to reach 90% healing, respectively. This study provides baseline information for wound healing in whale sharks and the methods proposed could act as a foundation for future research. Use of a detailed classification system, as presented here, may also assist in ocean scale injury comparisons between research groups and aid reliable descriptive data. Such findings can contribute to discussions regarding appropriate management in aggregation areas with an aim to reduce the likelihood of injuries, such as those resulting from vessel collisions, in these regions or during movements between coastal waters.
伤口愈合对于鲨鱼等海洋生物分类群很重要,它们在整个生命历程中可能会遭受一系列自然和人为造成的伤口。有证据表明,这类生物具有很强的外部伤口愈合能力。然而,由于商业和休闲海洋活动的增加,人为造成的伤口可能会更加频繁。鉴于鲸鲨对表层水域的利用以及野生动物旅游业的关注,它们尤其容易受伤。对于鲸鲨如何从受伤中恢复,人们了解有限,而且相关见解往往局限于个别偶然观察。本研究利用了来自印度洋两个鲸鲨聚集点的独特且有价值的照片数据源。对连续的伤口愈合进展案例进行了审查,以调查伤口的特征并量化大致的愈合时间框架。使用图像标准化方法对伤口进行长期测量。这项研究表明,到第25天时,主要伤口的表面积平均减少了56%,愈合最快的案例在4天内表面积减少了50%。到第35天时,所有伤口的表面积都达到了闭合90%的程度。根据伤口类型,愈合速度存在差异,撕裂伤和擦伤分别需要50天和22天达到90%的愈合程度。本研究为鲸鲨的伤口愈合提供了基线信息,所提出的方法可为未来研究奠定基础。此处介绍的详细分类系统的使用,也可能有助于不同研究团队在海洋尺度上对伤口进行比较,并有助于获取可靠的描述性数据。这些研究结果有助于讨论在聚集区域进行适当管理,以减少这些区域或沿海水域之间移动过程中受伤的可能性,比如船只碰撞造成的伤害。