My co-authors and I are very pleased to share with you two recently published 
papers in Diseases of Aquatic Organisms. The first paper presents the causes of 
death of cetaceans in the Catalan Coast 2012-2019. The second one analyses the 
risk factors for ingestion of debris and another abnormal material in the 
necropsied cetaceans.

Please feel free to contact me for any questions.
On behalf of all authors,

Mariano Domingo


Causes of cetacean stranding and death on the Catalonian coast (western 
Mediterranean Sea), 2012-2019
María Cuvertoret-Sanz, Carlos López-Figueroa, Alicia O’Byrne, Albert Canturri, 
Bernat Martí-Garcia, Ester Pintado, Lola Pérez, Llilianne Ganges, Alex Cobos, 
María Lourdes Abarca, Juan Antonio Raga, Marie-François Van Bressem, Mariano 
Domingo
*Corresponding author: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
DAO 142:239-253 (2020) DOI: 
https://doi.org/10.3354/dao03550<https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/dao/v142/p239-253/>


ABSTRACT: The causes of cetacean stranding and death along the Catalan coast 
between 2012 and 2019 were systematically investigated. Necropsies and detailed 
pathological investigations were performed on 89 well-preserved stranded 
cetaceans, including 72 striped dolphins Stenella coeruleoalba, 9 Risso’s 
dolphins Grampus griseus, 5 bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus, 1 common 
dolphin Delphinus delphis, 1 Cuvier’s beaked whale Ziphius cavirostris and 1 
fin whale Balaenoptera physalus. The cause of death was determined for 89.9% of 
the stranded cetaceans. Fisheries interaction was the most frequent cause of 
death in striped dolphins (27.8%) and bottlenose dolphins (60%). Cetacean 
morbillivirus (CeMV) was detected on the Catalan coast from 2016 to 2017, 
causing systemic disease and death in 8 of the 72 (11.1%) striped dolphins. 
Chronic CeMV infection of the central nervous system was observed from 
2018-2019 in a further 5 striped dolphins. Thus, acute and chronic CeMV disease 
caused mortality in 18% of striped dolphins and 14.6% of all 89 cetaceans. 
Brucella ceti was isolated in 6 striped dolphins and 1 bottlenose dolphin with 
typical brucellosis lesions and in 1 striped dolphin with systemic CeMV. 
Sinusitis due to severe infestation by the nematode parasite Crassicauda 
grampicola caused the death of 4 out of 6 adult Risso’s dolphins. Maternal 
separation, in some cases complicated with septicemia, was a frequent cause of 
death in 13 of 14 calves. Other less common causes of death were 
encephalomalacia of unknown origin, septicemia, peritonitis due to gastric 
perforation by parasites and hepatitis caused by Sarcocystis spp.


Ingestion of foreign materials by odontocetes along the Catalan coast: causes 
and consequences
A. Lacombe, E. Pintado, A. O’Byrne, A. Allepuz, L. Pérez-Rodriguez, M. Domingo
*Corresponding author: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
DAO 142:23-31 (2020)  DOI: 
https://doi.org/10.3354/dao03527<https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/dao/v142/p23-31/>

ABSTRACT: Ingestion of abnormal materials by cetaceans has been reported 
worldwide, but few studies have investigated the causes of foreign material 
ingestion. We retrospectively analysed necropsies performed between 2012 and 
2019 on 88 cetaceans stranded along the coast of Catalonia, Spain, and 
evaluated the association of abnormal ingested materials with 2 risk factors, 
namely disease of the central nervous system (CNS) and maternal separation. 
Abnormal materials were found in the digestive tract in 19 of 88 (21.6%) 
cetaceans; of these, 13 (60%) had lesions in the CNS, such as morbilliviral 
encephalitis, neurobrucellosis or encephalomalacia, and 3 were diagnosed as 
having experienced maternal separation. In a logistic regression model, CNS 
lesions and maternal separation were identified as risk factors for ingestion 
of foreign material, but with wide confidence intervals, probably due to the 
small sample size. In contrast, abnormal ingestion was not identified in any of 
the 25 (28%) cetaceans whose cause of death was attributed to interaction with 
humans. Abnormal ingestion should be interpreted with caution, and efforts 
should be made at necropsy to exclude CNS diseases through pathologic and 
microbiologic investigations. If disease of the CNS is a significant risk 
factor for ingestion of marine debris by small odontocetes, results of 
monitoring programmes may be biased by the prevalence of CNS disease in a 
specific area or population.






Mariano Domingo

Profesor del Departamento de Sanidad Animal de la UAB
Investigador del Subp. Enfermedades Exóticas del CReSA

Edifici CReSA, s/n, Campus de la Universitat Autònoma
08193  Bellaterra (Barcelona)
Catalunya
Tel.: +34 93 581 4567
[email protected]


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