ABSTRACT
We examined four dolphins (Grampus griseus) of 582 mass-stranded. Almost no contents were found in the alimentary canal. Nasitrema gondo and Crassicauda grampicola were found in the tympanic cavity. Severe degeneration of the eighth cranial nerve was observed microscopically in all animals and an egg of Nasitrema was found in a tissue crevice of the nerve. We propose that the nerves were damaged directly by Nasitrema.
Subject(s)
Dolphins , Trematoda/isolation & purification , Trematode Infections/veterinary , Vestibulocochlear Nerve Diseases/veterinary , Vestibulocochlear Nerve/pathology , Animals , Ear, Middle/parasitology , Female , Japan , Male , Trematode Infections/parasitology , Vestibulocochlear Nerve/parasitology , Vestibulocochlear Nerve Diseases/parasitology , Vestibulocochlear Nerve Diseases/pathologyABSTRACT
Hearing organs of the Odontoceti from two mass strandings in 1983 and 1986 were examined histopathologically. In the 1983 stranding, two of three pilot whales (Globicephala macrorhynchus) were necropsied and numerous Nasitrema sp. were found close to the eighth cranial nerve (nervus vistibulo cochlearis) in both animals. Patchy degeneration of the eighth cranial nerve in and out of the modiolus of the cochlea was observed. In the 1986 stranding, five of 125 false killer whales (Pseudorca crassiclens) were examined and numerous trematodes (Nasitrema gondo) were found in the tympanic cavities. Severe degeneration of the eighth cranial nerve was discovered and there were many trematode eggs in the nervous and surrounding tissues. Parasitogenic eighth neuropathy is proposed again as the cause of mass stranding of the Odontoceti.