AI Article Synopsis

  • - Fibropapillomatosis, a disease affecting mainly green marine turtles, leads to tumor growths that can be fatal, with cases on the rise in recent decades.
  • - The disease is potentially linked to chelonid herpesvirus 5, which has co-evolved with turtles, but increasing prevalence is thought to result from external factors like environmental changes rather than mutations of the virus.
  • - The study found correlations between disease incidence and environmental factors like sea surface temperature, salinity, and nutrient discharge, emphasizing the need for more research into these influences on Fibropapillomatosis and advocating for a multidisciplinary approach in future studies.

Article Abstract

Fibropapillomatosis is a neoplastic disease of marine turtles, with green turtles () being the most affected species. Fibropapillomatosis causes debilitating tumor growths on soft tissues and internal organs, often with lethal consequences. Disease incidence has been increasing in the last few decades and the reason is still uncertain. The potential viral infectious agent of Fibropapillomatosis, chelonid herpesvirus 5, has been co-evolving with its sea turtle host for millions of years and no major mutation linked with increased disease occurrence has been detected. Hence, frequent outbreaks in recent decades are likely attributable to external drivers such as large-scale anthropogenic changes in the green turtle coastal marine ecosystem. This study found that variations in sea surface temperature, salinity, and nutrient effluent discharge from nearby rivers were correlated with an increased incidence of the disease, substantiating that these may be among the significant environmental drivers impacting Fibropapillomatosis prevalence. This study offers data and insight on the need to establish a baseline of environmental factors which may drive Fibropapillomatosis and its clinical exacerbation. We highlight the multifactorial nature of this disease and support the inclusion of interdisciplinary work in future Fibropapillomatosis research efforts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9137486PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12101236DOI Listing

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