Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

SoylentNews is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop. Only 17 submissions in the queue.

Submission Preview

Great White Sharks Washing Up Dead in Canada With Brain Swelling

Rejected submission by upstart at 2025-02-03 01:07:24
News

████ # This file was generated bot-o-matically! Edit at your own risk. ████

Great White Sharks Washing Up Dead in Canada With Brain Swelling [nytimes.com]:

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENTYou have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

The first great white shark was found dead in August 2023 on a beach in a national park on Prince Edward Island, Canada: a young male, 500 pounds, 8 feet 9 inches from snout to tail. Park workers soon arrived with a pickup truck, loaded the carcass and drove it to a cooler at the Atlantic Veterinary College at the University of Prince Edward Island. Aside from some scrapes acquired en route, the shark showed no signs of injury.

Dr. Megan Jones, a veterinary pathologist at the college and regional director of the Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative, or C.W.H.C., began a necropsy early the next morning, while the body “was really, really fresh,” she said. “When we look through the microscope at the tissues, they’re very well preserved.”

The C.W.H.C., a network affiliated with Canada’s veterinary schools, studies wildlife health issues. In 30 years, however, the group had never come across a great white, and it was not at all obvious how this one had died. Starvation was ruled out from the very first incision, when the shark’s 76-pound liver, where the animal stores fat, spilled onto the examination table. Other organs showed no sign of trauma. Only later, after microscopic testing, did the cause of death become apparent: meningoencephalitis, an inflammation of brain tissues.

At first Dr. Jones found the diagnosis more interesting than alarming. Then came the other sharks. Over the next few months the C.W.H.C. received either whole animals or tissue samples from four more white sharks found beached in eastern Canada. “Three of these five seem to have the same potentially infectious disease affecting their brain,” Dr. Jones said. “We need to know more about what that is.”

Those five white sharks are among nine known deaths dating from a shark found on July 4, 2022, in Massachusetts; most of those had brain inflammation. Such inflammation has been seen in other shark species, but the cause in those cases — bacterial infection, for instance — was obvious, unlike in white sharks. Dr. Jones is now part of a small group of scientists in the United States and Canada who are trying to untangle the mystery — and determine whether white sharks are facing a broader threat.

ImageA great white shark swimming near the shore on Cape Cod in 2016.Credit...Wayne Davis/Atlantic White Shark Conservancy, via Associated Press

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into [nytimes.com] your Times account, or subscribe [nytimes.com] for all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in [nytimes.com].

Want all of The Times? Subscribe [nytimes.com].

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT


Original Submission