| Color Key | |
| Important key words or phrases. | |
| Important concepts or main ideas. | |
1. Learning Objectives and Review
1.1. Learning Objectives
- Be familiar with the federal regulations and agencies governing work with wild or captive marine mammals
- Gain an appreciation for the common safety and health issues involved in capture and restraint of marine mammals
- Be familiar with the common health issues related to captive husbandry of marine mammals
- Understand the significance of emerging morbilliviruses in marine mammals
2. Introduction
2.1. Taxonomy
| Order Carnivora | Order Sirenia | |
Suborder Pinnipedia
|
Suborder Fissipedia
|
|
2.2. Laws Governing Acquisition And Care Of Marine Mammals
-
Marine Mammal Protection
Act
- Passed in 1972; last updated in 1994
- Protects and promotes growth of marine mammal populations and their resources
- Allows exemptions by permit in some cases
- Clarifies roles of NMFS and FWS as they pertain to marine mammals
- Regulates animal transports
-
Animal Welfare Act
- Passed in 1966; last updated in 1990
- Regulated by the USDA APHIS
- Ensures that animals used in research, public exhibits, or as pets are provided with humane care and treatment, and provides transport standards for these animals
-
Endangered Species
Act
- Passed in 1973; last updated in 1988
- Permits allow taking of listed animals for research, propagation, native subsistence
- Enforcement of violations includes fines and jail terms
-
Convention On The
International Trade in Endangered Species
- Included in the Endangered Species Act
- Established in 1973
- 150 countries participate in this agreement
- Trade of listed species is regulated or prohibited
2.3. Bodies With Regulatory Or Advisory Jurisdiction Over Institutions Maintaining Captive Held Or Stranded Marine Mammals
Regulatory bodies are empowered to make unannounced inspections of facilities and husbandry and medical records.
-
National Marine
Fisheries Service NMFS (NOAA Fisheries)
- Supports fisheries management and development, and enforcement of guidelines
- Protects species through habitat conservation
- The official regulatory authority for cetaceans and pinnipeds, except walruses
-
U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service
- The principal agency for conserving, protecting and enhancing fish, wildlife, and plants and their habitats
- The official management authority for sea otters, polar bears, walruses, manatees/dugongs and sea turtles
-
Animal Plant
Health Inspection Service of the USDA
- Regulates the treatment of marine mammals held in captivity
- Determines health standards, including space requirements, water quality standards
- Implements all facets of the Animal Welfare Act
- Makes unannounced inspections of facilities to inspect facilities, and husbandry/medical records
-
The Marine Mammal
Commission
- Established under the Marine Mammal Protection Act
- Responsible for developing, reviewing, and making recommendations on policies of federal agencies with respect to marine mammal conservation and research
- Independent agency of the US Executive Branch consisting of 3 commissioners appointed by the President
- State Veterinary Regulatory Boards
- Most state veterinary boards will not take jurisdiction over facilities maintaining marine mammals
- Generally, states comply with all aspects of federal jurisdiction and leave regulation of such facilities to the USDA APHIS team.
- May waive state license requirements for veterinarians working solely in such facilities
- Institutional Animal Care And Use Committee
- APHIS-required committee that oversees the care and use of collection/stranded animals used in a research setting
- Oversees and modifies as necessary all research projects to ensure that animals are used appropriately in regards to pain and discomfort
- Oversees the institutional facilities in which animals are housed
3. Anatomical/Physiological Adaptations of Marine Mammals
3.1. Thermoregulation
Heat transfer ability of water is 25X more efficient than air. Adaptations associated with thermoregulation:
- Large size - there are NO small marine mammals
- Body shape to minimize surface area
- Body insulation - blubber, dense fur
- Arteriovenous anastomoses (AVAs) - alternate blood return route that closes when there is a need to conserve heat
- Counter-current heat exchange - periarticular venous rete
- Behavioral
3.2. Pressure and Diving
Pressure increases 1 atm/ 10 meters depth - a dolphin diving 1000 feet is at a pressure 100X greater than it was at the surface
3.3. Osmotic Regulation
- Seawater is hyperosmotic to the mammalian body so there are physiologic demands of water intake, retention and elimination
- Water production
- Virtually no direct water intake except with pinnepeds - no access to fresh water
- Metabolically-produced water via oxidation of proteins and fats
- Inspired air is a potential source if there is sufficient gradient at the alveolar/capillary interface
3.4. Reproduction
- All reproductive organs are internal.
- Cetacean placenta is epitheliochorial to result in the least amount of blood lost in parturition
- Cetacean parturition is normally breech presentation ensuring the umbilical cord remains intact for the longest duration possible.
- Delayed implantation, or embryonic diapause, in pinnipeds
and sea otters
- 3-5 months
- To align fetal development with the season of highest reproductive success.
3.5. Cetaceans
- Large lungs, thorax very flexible and collapsible at depth
- Blowhole, energy saving means of respiring, also involved with sound production
- Larynx is detachable from cranial recess for intubation purposes
- Cartilaginous bronchioles to level of tertiary bronchioles, allows rapid flow of inspired air
- Vascular retes, involved in countercurrent heat exchange thermoregulation and supplying oxygenated blood preferentially to certain organs during dives
- Multicompartmened stomach, enlargement of the first compartment permits gorge feeding in "times of plenty".
- Polyreniculated kidneys
- Blubber, prevents heat loss and provides hydrodynamic faring
- Absence of hind limbs
- Presence of a large brain with extensive enhancement of portion of cerebral cortex involved in auditory processing
- Ability to survive without sources of fresh water except water of metabolism
- High PCV, large RBCs and high myoglobin levels combine with dive reflex and thoracic rete to permit extended breath holding periods
- Presence of flukes and dorsal fin, aid in thermoregulation and locomotion
- Spherical lens aids in visual accommodation in air and water
![]() Viscera of a cetacean
|
3.6. Pinnipeds
- Large caval sinuses can act as a storehouse of oxygenated blood
- Thick blubber layer to prevent heat loss, very dense fur in pinniped species lacking a thick blubber layer
- Cartilaginous bronchioles aid in rapid movement of inspired air
- Webbed hind flippers
- Polyreniculated kidneys
- Spherical lens aids in visual accommodation in air and water
- High PCV (large and numerous RBCs)
- Pronounced dive reflex
- Large lung capacity
![]() Viscera of a pinniped
|
4. Marine Mammal Husbandry Issues
The designs of all permitted marine mammal holding enclosures are dictated, in part, by regulations contained within the Animal Welfare Act (Part 3, Subpart E). Space, temperature, water and air qualities are just a few of the parameters that are regulated. Deviations from the regulatory specifications usually require veterinary approval and justification. Quality of the food provided and the procedures involved in food preparation are also regulated, as is transport of marine mammals. Regulations relating to stranded marine mammal husbandry are less rigid and are currently in a state of flux.
4.1. Space
The size of a marine mammal enclosure is regulated based on the size and behavior of the species being maintained. Important factors include; minimum horizontal dimensions, water depth, and in the case of pinnipeds, dry resting area.
![]() |
4.2. Environmental Quality Issues
These involve the physical features of the air and water and any added compounds.
4.2.1. Air Quality:
The principal concern is related to indoor exhibits or holding areas which must maintain a continuous supply of air with adequate exchange rates to prevent the development of excessive odors, chlorine or ozone breakdown products or gaseous breakdown products of animal metabolism.
![]() |
4.2.2. Water Quality:
The issues in the case of the water in which marine mammals are held include; disinfection, temperature, pH, clarity, salinity, etc. Water temperatures must be in a range to which the species held can easily acclimate.
- Disinfection must be documented by at least weekly coliform counts. Most institutions employ a combination of ozonization and chlorination to disinfect marine mammal water systems.
- Salinity levels of closed systems are regulated and most institutions maintain salinities of > 26ppt and < 35ppt.
- Water clarity is maintained by means of filters and flocculents and ozone prevents the build up of chromatogenic substances in the water.
- The water pH is maintained by addition of acids or bases as required.
- Do not think of marine mammals as having the same water quality requirements as fish.
![]() |
4.3. Marine Mammal Housing
- Most cetaceans are dependent upon salt-water environments.
- 3 Main categories of water systems
- Closed - recirculated seawater
- Semi-Closed - enclosed water mixed with new
- Open - natural seawater constantly circulating
- Trade-off: Vigilant water quality maintenance of closed systems versus exposure to natural threats (ex. pathogens, contaminants etc) of open systems
4.3.1. Cetacean Requirements
- Seawater!!! - cetaceans housed in <15 ppt salt will develop dermal changes and electrolyte disturbances.
- Facility Design Considerations
- Outdoor vs. indoor
- Tanks vs. net pens vs. open ocean with barrier
- Slide-out/beaching area
- Shallow underwater rim along perimeter
- Numerous pools for animal separation
- False bottom
- Every facility should have the means to safely and easily access animals in and out of the water.
![]() |
4.3.2. Pinniped Requirements
- Need access to both fresh and salt water
- Pinnipeds kept in freshwater commonly develop ocular problems such as corneal edema, cataracts and eventually chronic keratopathy
- Pinnipeds (esp. phocids) may been reported to develop electrolyte disturbances and an AddisonÂ?s-like syndrome if they have no access to salt
- A haul-out area must be provided
- Water access must always be possible - can use a fresh water spout for drinking
![]() |
4.4. Nutrition
- Feed types: Providing fresh fish in the quantities required by major aquariums and oceanariums is a practical impossibility so freshly thawed frozen fish is normally employed. Ideally several species of fish are available and offered so that animals do not develop a fixation on a single species. This is especially important, as all species of food fish are not always readily available. Invertebrates, especially squid are also regularly included in the diet of captive marine mammals.
- Restaurant sanitation principles should be employed and food should be fit for human consumption : USDA APHIS' - Handling Fish Fed to Fish-Eating Animals
- Veterinarians are involved in the inspection of
new lots of fish provided by brokers and should meet with and help
educate staff on what constitutes acceptable food fish. Proximate analysis of
representative samples of each new lot of food fish should be conducted so that
adjustments in the amount fed can be made in order to provide the desired
caloric intake.
- Caloric density of fish varies widely by species, season, catch location etc. so proximate analysis is generally necessary.
- Caloric density by species (general): Mackerel>Herring>Smelt>Capelin>Squid

- Food preparation practices differ between institutions but should be directed at thawing fish so that the product fed has been thawed for < 24 hrs and its temperature has never exceeded 5C, and that valuable nutrients have not been lost via extensive water thawing.
- Food must be kept at <40°F from catch until feeding
- Vitamin supplementation practices vary but vitamins B1 (2-5 mg/kcal/day and E (50-100 IU/kg food) are almost universally supplemented.
- Supplementation needs increase in a gestating/lactating female.
- Iron storage disease is emerging as a problem in aged animals of some species so iron and vitamin C supplements should not be used.
- Commercial marine mammals multivitains available from Mazuri.
4.4.1. Feeding Captive Marine Mammals
Feeding regimes vary between institutions but ideally each animal is fed individually by an individual trained to detect deviations from the norm. Feed records should be maintained as many changes in animals' appetites may have a seasonal basis which can be readily demonstrated when such long term records are available.
- Fish = primary reinforcement (operant conditioning)
- Feeding provides daily ration AND is a critical control point for successful training of husbandry behaviors to facilitate veterinary preventative medicine/treatment.
- Goal of feeding: Maximum training in balance with delivery of essential requirements and prevention of obesity and toxicoses
- Ration should be formulated to meet caloric requirements, determined by close monitoring of body condition and hunger drive
- A thorough history of the animal's feeding history and schedule is critical to the initial assessment of any marine mammal.
![]() |
![]() |
5. Restraint
Safety of both animals and staff, when handling marine mammals always dictates some level of restraint. Such restraint may be effected in any of several ways including: behavioral, manual, mechanical or chemical restraint.
5.1. Behavioral Restraint
This is the ideal situation in that use of force or drugs is not required. Blood samples are less likely to show a stress leukogram and most procedures are rapidly completed. Unfortunately, training animals to perform husbandry behaviors is very time consuming and, in addition, ill animals are less likely to perform such behaviors. Despite these limitations the number of marine mammals trained to perform husbandry behaviors continues to grow.
- Examples: blood collection, tooth scaling, behavioral injections, maintaining layout
![]() Using behavioral restraint to obtain a blood
sample.
|
5.2. Manual Restraint:
- Experienced staff can safely manually restrain most small pinnipeds (<50kg).
- Manual restraint in cetaceans
- Place in sternal recumbency, with tucked flippers.
- People are positioned close to animal on each side.
- Do not restrict chest expansion
- Control the flukes!
- Keep wet for cooling purposes
![]() |
![]() |
5.3. Mechanical Restraint:
Large or aggressive marine mammals may require the use of equipment to provide safe restraint. Squeeze cages, dog houses, safety boards, stretchers or snares and nooses are only a few of the mechanical methods designed to level the playing field for individuals handling marine mammals.
![]() A "dog house" is used to restraint a seal.
| |
![]() Squeeze restraint
|
![]() Restraint boards
|
5.4. Chemical Restraint:
This category encompasses everything in the range between mild sedation and surgical anesthesia. Marine mammals may present many challenges to safe chemical restraint including thermoregulatory disruption, pronounced dive reflexes and apneustic respiratory patterns and loss of respiratory drive (cetaceans). General anesthesia of marine mammals entails significant risks as compared with a typical small animal anesthetic event. For this reason many marine mammal practioners prefer to employ sedation vs. a surgical plane of anesthesia when the situation allows this option.
- Short acting and reversible agents are preferred.
- Benzodiazapines such as diazepam and midazolam have been safely administered to many cetaceans and pinnipeds without significant adverse effects except a decreased respiratory drive. Doxapram ordinarily will correct this condition.
- Local anesthesia combined with benzodiazepine restraint should prove adequate for the vast majority of minor surgical procedures.
- Opiates provide another reversible option but paradoxical reactions have been reported when these are used in some species of otariid pinnipeds.
- Acycloalkylamines and phenothiazines can depress respiration and depress thermoregulatory centers
5.4.1. General Anesthesia
- General anesthesia can be most safely accomplished with IV propofol induction and isofluorane or sevofluorane maintenance via mask or preferably via endotracheal tube
- Expect to provide PPV, either manually or with a ventilator
- Dopram can be given to correct a decreased respiratory drive.
- Usually premedicate with atropine
- Intubation
- Cetaceans- through mouth, not blowhole. Displace the vertically oriented larynx anteriorly (not often done)
- Otariids - tracheal bifurcation is at level of mid-sternum
- Phocids - tracheal bifurcation is at the level of the xiphoid
![]() |
6. Marine Mammal Health Assessment
6.1. Routine Health Monitoring
- Body weight
- Trends in weight are clues to overall health
- Affected by stage of growth, gestation, lactation, season, water temperature, disease
- Blubber and subcutaneous adipose measurement may be an alternative.
- Regular veterinary inspection is necessary even in the face of apparently perfect health. Marine mammals have the ability to mask significant pathologic changes, as compromised animals in the wild are at increased risk of predation.
- Hematology and serum chemistry analyses
- Fecal flotation
- Nasal/blowhole/gastric/anal/ vaginal/preputial cytology +/- culture
- Body condition assessment
- Ophthalmic and oral examinations
- Palpation, when possible
- Radiographs or ultrasound as indicated
![]() Obtaining a microbiological sample for culture from
the blow hole in a Beluga Whale.
|
6.2. Signs of Illness
- Poor appetite may be the only sign of illness, but also does not necessarily mean the animal is ill
- Unusual behavior
- Weight Loss
- Skin Damage may indicate or lead to serious disease
- Foul breath Vomiting/Diarrhea/Discharges/Urine cloudiness or discoloration
![]() Performing a physical exam on a harbor seal
pup.
|
6.3. Physical Examination
- A thorough history should precede any exam and should include: species, age, condition, temperament, facilities, personnel, specifics of complaint, etc.
- Follow a standard routine, be complete and QUICK
- Usually collect blood first to avoid stress leukogram component
- Need to be able to recognize normal behavior, attitude and appearance
- Observe animal before any "hands-on" exam
- Body condition, character of respiration, feces
- Normal behavior?
- Ensure adequate restraint for the safety of the animal and the people.
6.3.1. Ophthalmic Exam
- Normal tear film is viscous and clear
- Sick cetaceans will often have dull, squinting eyes
- Sea lions have a flat central area to their cornea
- Iris hypochromia is common in some species of pinnipeds
![]() Bilateral ocular disease in a harbor
seal.
|
6.3.2. Oral Exam
- Look for fractured, missing, worn teeth
- Tooth condition can help you age stranded animals
- Captive sea lion's teeth are normally stained a dark blackish brown
- Sea lion tonsils may be highly visible normally
- Nasal discharge in pinnipeds may be caused by URI or mites
![]() Routine dental care in Beluga Whale.
|
6.3.3. Auscultation
- Best performed with animals out of water
- Assessing respiratory rate
- Cetaceans- over 5 minute period as they tend to breath only 0-4 times/minute
- Pinnipeds- over 1 minute period, as terrestrial animals
- Pinnipeds have fewer referred sounds than cetaceans.
- It is not uncommon for cetaceans with severe intrathoracic pathology to have an apparently normal auscultation.
- Percussion may provide evidence of abnormal fluid or gas accumulation
6.4. Blood Collection
- Cetaceans
- Fluke vessels
- Caudal peduncular vascular plexus
- Less commonly, vessels in dorsal fin or pectoral flippers
- Arteries are often generally surrounded by venous spaces so true arterial or venous samples are difficult to obtain
- Pinnipeds
- Otariids- caudal gluteal veinrun along sacrum off the midline ridge 1/3 of the way from the tuber coxae to base of tail. Also interdigital vein
- Phocids- To access lumbar extradural sinus, insert needle into an intervertebral space perpendicular to spine, just off midline. Also can use the plantar venous plexus.
![]() |
![]() |
6.5. Imaging
- Ultrasound
- Preferable to radiographs for abdominal information and in large animals
- Routine part of health evaluation
- Radiography
- Most useful in smaller marine mammals
- Best assessment of bone abnormalities
- Can do contrast studies in marine mammals as well.
![]() Radiology in a Beluga Whale
|
![]() Ultrasound in the pool.
|
6.6. Endoscopy
Most common uses are for exmination of the esophagus, forestomach, upper respiratory tract, foreign body removal and artificial insemination.
6.7. Clinical Pathology
Routine bloodwork is a sensitive, not specific, indicator of disturbances in homeostasis. "Normal" values vary by individual and species; also by laboratory and technician. It is important to interpret the entire animal and it's clinical picture, not just the bloodwork. Often times, trends are more valuable than individual values.
6.7.1. Marine vs. Terrestrial Mammals CBC
- Higher PCV/HCT- usually due to a larger cell volume, not due to a higher # cells/unit volume
- Microcytic, hypochromic regenerative anemia is common with nearly any disturbance in homeostasis
- Low trending HCT signifies a medical issue
- Often there will be higher eosinophil % in marine mammals (wild>captive).
- Eosinopenia is often correlated with illness.
- Downward trends in absolute number of lymphocytes is a poor prognostic sign
- Lymphocytes will be higher in juvenile cetaceans and decrease with age
6.7.2. Marine vs. Terrestrial Mammals Chemistry Panel
- BUN will be higher, esp. in cetaceans.
- Disparity between BUN and Creatinine - BUN easily influenced by diet and protein catabolism and can intermittently (and normally) be markedly elevated.
- Na and Cl tend to be higher, K lower due to the saline environment
- P tends to be higher, Ca lower - changes in serum Ca have not been correlated with pathology in marine mammals
- Poor prognostic indices: negative trend in ALP and negative trend in serum iron
- ALP does not generally rise in illness or stress
- GGT in cetaceans may indicate kidney function
- Hepatitis syndrome : cetaceans will frequently develop transaminase enzyme elevations without any clinical change
6.7.3. Urinalysis
- Turbidity: Clear
- Color: light to dark amber; yellow
- SpGr = 1.030+
- Acidic pH
- Urate crystals are common in normal dolphins
6.7.4. Serology
- Assays to test for common diseases
- Erysipelothrix sp.
- Brucella sp.
- Morbillivirus sp.
- Calicivirus sp.
- Immune status functional assessment (lymphocyte markers and assays, cytokine assay)
- Some terrestrial animal tests (i.e. progesterone) will also work on marine mammals but need to be interpreted with care
7. Diseases of Marine Mammals
7.1. Viral Diseases
- Pox and Papilloma Viruses
- Morbilliviruses
- Herpesvirus
- Caliciviruses
The US Navy is currently testing a DNA vaccine against morbillivirus infection in bottlenose dolphins. A number of institutions vaccinate pinnipeds against rabies with the development of presumably protective titers.
7.2. Bacterial Diseases
Bacterial diseases are often opportunistic invaders accompanying parasitic, viral, or traumatic disease. They are the leading cause of death in marine mammals
- Erysipelothrix
- Leptospira
- Pseudomonas
- Helicobacter
- Mycobacteria
- Brucella
- Nocardia
- Staph and Streptococcus
Vaccination protocols for protection against eryispelas, maleoidosis and leptospirosis are now in place at many institutions. Development of vaccines effective in preventing brucellosis and helicobacter infections are under consideration
8. Ancillary Material
8.1. Readings
8.1.1. Texts and articles
Crissey, Susan D. Handling Fish Fed to Fish-Eating Animals, A Manual of Standard Operating Procedures. Susan D. Crissey. USDA APHIS, 1998.
Fowler, Murray E. and Miller, R. Eric. Zoo and Wild Animal Medicine, 5th ed. Saunders, 2003. Chapters: 44, 45, 46
Geraci, Joseph and V. Lounsbury. Marine Mammals Ashore, A Field Guide for Strandings. Texas A and M Sea Grant Publication. 1993.
Dierauf, Leslie. CRC Handbook of Marine Mammal Medicine. 2nd ed. CRC Press. 2001.
8.2. Websites
The Convention On The International Transport Of Endangered Species
International Association for Aquatic Animal Medicine (IAAAM) http://www.iaaam.org/
The Marine Mammal Protection Act Marine Mammal Protection Act
Mystic Aquarium http://www.mysticaquarium.org/
National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA http://www.noaa.gov/
National Marine Fisheries Service NMFS http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/
New England Aquarium http://www.neaq.org/
North Atlantic Marine Mammal Commission http://www.nammco.no/


























