http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-sci-fish-skin-cancer-20120802,0,1441790.story
Fish getting skin cancer from UV radiation, scientists say
Teams find cancerous lesions on the scales of about 15% of the coral trout in 
Australia's Great Barrier Reef, which is under an ozone hole.
  a.. 
       
      A coral trout with melanoma. A normal coral trout is orange all over; 
researchers determined that the dark patches visible on this trout are 
cancerous. (Michelle Heupel, Australian Institute of Marine Science / August 1, 
2012) 
     

By Jon Bardin, Los Angeles Times 
August 2, 2012
If you're still skeptical that a tan can be dangerous, consider this: 
Scientists have found that wild fish are getting skin cancer from ultraviolet 
radiation.

Approximately 15% of coral trout in Australia's Great Barrier Reef had 
cancerous lesions on their scales. In that regard, they resemble Australians 
who live on land — 2 in 3 people who live down under will be diagnosed with 
skin cancer before the age of 70, the highest rate in the world. It's probably 
no coincidence that Australia is under the Earth's biggest hole in the ozone 
layer.

Researchers hadn't set out to look for signs of cancer in fish.

Scientists from the Australian Institute of Marine Science were near the Great 
Barrier Reef conducting a survey of shark prey, predominantly coral trout. They 
kept seeing strange dark patches on the normally bright orange fish, and for 
help they turned to another research team from the University of Newcastle in 
England that was studying coral disease in the area.

The research team's first guess was that the patches were caused by an 
infection, said Michael Sweet, a coral disease expert. "We can check for 
microbial pathogens quite easily. So we designed an experiment, screened for 
them, and couldn't find anything," Sweet said. "So we had to look deeper."

Sweet and his colleagues cut the fish tissue into slices and put them under a 
microscope. "We basically stumbled onto these tumor formations," he said. Then 
they compared them with samples from fish that had been given melanoma — the 
most dangerous type of skin cancer — as part of a laboratory experiment. They 
looked nearly identical.

The findings were published online Wednesday by the journal PLoS One.

Even though this is the first published account of skin cancer in wild fish, it 
is unlikely the phenomenon is new, said Michelle Heupel, a researcher at the 
Australian Institute of Marine Science who wrote the study with Sweet and 
others.

"When I talk to people who have been fishing for a long time, they tell me 
they've seen this since back in the 1980s," she said.

The researchers were unable to determine why the incidence of melanoma was so 
high in these fish. Sweet said it was probably not a coincidence that the 
cancer occurred in the Great Barrier Reef, which sits under the outer reaches 
of the ozone hole centered over Antarctica. That greatly increases the area's 
exposure to harmful ultraviolet radiation, which can lead to cancer-causing 
mutations in DNA.

Team members also suspect that the Great Barrier Reef's location at the edge of 
the coral trout's range increases its vulnerability to cancer.

"They are at the extreme of their habitat," Sweet said. "They are struggling to 
cope, which means they will be more susceptible to more diseases."

Aside from their skin lesions, the fish that were captured by researchers did 
not show any signs of illness. But Nancy Knowlton, a marine ecologist at the 
Smithsonian Institution in Washington, said it remained possible that a 
significant number of fish were becoming sick from the cancer.

"Once the melanoma gets invasive, the fish probably get compromised," making 
them more vulnerable to sharks, said Knowlton, who was not involved in the 
study. "Somebody with advanced melanoma is being taken care of by doctors and 
loved ones, but fish will be eliminated fairly quickly."

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