A 4-year study of Northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) leptospirosis in the Bering Sea has shown that in newborn pups Leptospira pomona is associated with a multiple hemorrhage syndrome. Adults may develop an interstitial nephritis and shed organisms in the urine. The hed prevalence, based on microscopic slide agglutination tests, ranged between 7.0% and 15.4% for adult females and 3-4 year old bachelor bulls, whereas nursing pups averaging 4 months of age had a prevalence of 2%. These results are used to conclude that leptospirosis is not acquired primarily on the breeding rookeries but rather is more frequently acquired subsequent to the purps leaving the rookeries, presumably through the food chain during their first pelagic cycle.
Several hundred thousand northern fur seals (C. ursinus) are born each summer during July at St. Paul Island in the Bering Sea. The weather in the area is usually cold, wet, and windy during the breeding season. At birth the pups are small (5--6 kg) and insulated only by a partly wettable pelt and a 2- to 4-mm layer of blubber. In air, the pups' lower critical temperature appears to be below the 6 degrees C 50-yr record low July temperature for the islands. During rainy weather much of the insulative value of the pelt is lost, and the pups, which already have a high resting metabolic rate of 3.5 W.kg-1, must increase heat production by shivering and/or nonshivering thermogenesis to maintain deep body temperature. The high level of metabolism (up to 18 W.kg-1) is supported by a very rich milk. The pups will, nevertheless, become hypothermic if their insulation is not improved through peripheral vasoconstriction and shedding of water from the pelt by periodic shudder. Even with these protections the newborn and very young pups are brought close to their limit of tolerance during rainy and windy days. Unfit pups are likely to succumb under such circumstances.
Abstract:In northern fur seals (Callor/zinus ursinus) up to at least 4 years of age there is virtually 100% prevalence of infestation with the nasal mite Ortlzo/za!arac/zmze attenuata.
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