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Blakeney & Blakeney Point.
Think of Blakeney and you’ll probably think of the Harbour or the
Point, and on Blakeney Point, you’ll probably think seals. A
seal trip - spotting seals from a boat out of Blakeney or Morston
- is one of the must-do things for visitors to the North Norfolk coast.
And
seal spotting at Blakeney Point is easy. The Point is one of the big
hauling out places for the colony which inhabits the Wash and adjacent
coasts. There are others such as Donna Nook in Lincolnshire and Scroby
Sands off Yarmouth but Blakeney Point is a short boat trip on sheltered
water with plenty of terns, oyster catchers and gulls for a side show
and a tea room and strolls in the dunes for afters. Seal spotters
bob twenty metres offshore while the spotted lie in rows of indifference
with only the occasional glance outwards, secure in the knowledge
that they could be back in the water with barely a flip if someone
so much as said cull rather than gull. But they do sometimes cross to the near Continental coast which is probably how the latest catastrophe - the return of phocine distemper virus (PDV) - came to afflict them in 2002. This is a nasty virus, killing many seals in its own right and killing a lot more through secondary infections which get past suppressed immune systems. Its direct effects include encephalitis with attendant fits and convulsions, together with nasal discharge and coughing which are often followed by pneumonia. Stricken animals, unable to dive for food, haul out to rest and then, too weak to move, get left by the tide. Coughing among animals hauled out in close proximity and a virus incubation period of 10-14 days seem to be part of the rapid spread mechanism.
It
is also a selective virus, affecting mainly common seals rather
than greys. First seen in 1988, it killed about 18,000 commons
in Europe, including 3000 in and around the Wash, but only
400 greys. This latest epidemic, which has involved commons
in almost every case, began on the east side of Denmark early
last summer, quickly rounding the Danish peninsular and running
down the Dutch and French coasts before breaking out in the
Wash in July. Since then, it probably wiped out two thirds
of the local population which had only just returned to its
pre-1988 levels.
There isn’t much resistance. In the wild, seals are
thought to live for 20-25 years (up to 40 years in captivity)
and that means that there were still survivors from the 1988
outbreak who may have had a little more resilience. But otherwise,
the main line of defence ran through East Winch near King’s
Lynn where the RSPCA Wildlife Hospital devoted an increasing
amount of its resources to seals picked up from the Norfolk
and Lincolnshire coasts.
Not that it had spare capacity as such. Like any hospital,
it has to deal with anything that comes in and casualties
from among most indigenous vertebrates are likely to be found
there from time to time. It is a place of departments, geared
to the wide ranging needs of the various species. Recuperating
swans and ducks occasionally stroll the corridors as patients
do.
The
seals - or those not well enough to use the outdoor pools
which means all of them on arrival - were housed indoors in
concrete pens, each with a bath big enough to allow them to
immerse and keep cool. Some could feed, others had to be encouraged
to eat while the most sick were force fed fish soup via a
funnel and tube. The work was intensive and a little strenuous.
Getting food into a wild animal heavier than most dogs which
may be ill but can still bite takes technique.
But the hospital’s 20 staff working in three shifts
have had plenty of practice lately. Back in the late summer,
up to five seals a day were coming in, according to veterinary
manager, Ian Robinson, and one of the problems, he said, was
that their condition was deceptive.
‘We expected that we would get a high mortality rate
from the virus itself but we thought that those that got through
the first couple of weeks - we hoped for at least half the
intake - might survive. And at first things seemed to be going
well, but after a while most of the survivors developed secondary
problems, particularly a herpes virus which got them while
they were immuno-supressed. A lot died. That was the difficult
part. If a seal comes in sick and you can’t cure it
and it dies or you have to put it down, you can cope with
that, but when it seems to respond and is looking good and
it’s been with you for maybe two months, and then in
a few days, it dies, it’s harder for the staff to deal
with.’
By October, the intake had dropped to about five a week
but, says Ian, that was probably an indication that there
were far fewer animals left to spread the infection. Indeed,
by January when the rate was down to less than one a week,
it seemed likely that two thirds of the Wash population had
perished. Things will become clearer when the Sea Mammal Research
Unit (SMRU) based in Scotland does its next fly-over count
in the early summer; its previous count was made just before
the virus hit.
There is no established cure for PDV and treatment is limited
to nursing and feeding infected animals until they recover
or succumb. But the hospital has recently started trials with
a canine vaccine and it seems to have helped, both with the
effects of the virus and in preventing seals from contracting
it if they come in for other reasons.
‘It’s actually a canine vaccine’ said Ian, ‘But the
problem with canine vaccines is that they are usually multi-targeted.
They might cover others problems like hepatitis as well as
distemper and every one of those other elements is potentially
a risk to the seals - you don’t know how they are going
to react. So we got the vaccine manufacturer to make up a
batch of purely canine distemper and nothing else. Then we
got a licence from the veterinary medical director to use
it and we have been doing so for a couple of months.’
While the net effect of the 2002 epidemic will only become
clear in retrospect, at least knowledge of the workings of
the virus and the treatment of seals is accumulating. In 1988,
it was a while before the nature of the infection was known
but it was identified early this time and monitored from the
outset and the hospital has learned a lot, and not only on
treatment but on administration too.
In any normal year, just a few seals are brought in to the
hospital where, like all animals admitted, they are numbered
and named to avoid confusion. The names for each species are
drawn from a particular category such as trees or TV characters
or countries. Last year, before the virus struck, the hospital
had already decided to name the year’s intake of seals
after domestic cleaning materials but by the end of January,
there had been 164 seal admissions since the late summer which
means that hospital staff also learned a bit about the domestic
cleaning market.
But the testament to their efforts by the end of the year was
a total of 40 survivors, an increasing number of them with
a clean bill of health. By the end of January 2003 some were
being returned to the wild. How numbers would look when the
SMRU did its count later in the year remained to be seen.
Forty successes may not be a huge number in the overall scheme
of things but experience gained this time around will be invaluable
next - and there will almost certainly be a next time. In
the meantime, this year’s rescue effort means that there
should be just a few more than there might have been to haul
out at Blakeney Point and be spotted by their appreciative
(and economy boosting) audience.
* available from Edgar Spelman, Booksales and Publicity Department,
Round Tower Churches Society, 105 Norwich Road, New Costessey, Norwich
NR5 0LF, price £18.40 inc p&p. A booklet, East Anglian
Round Tower Churches is also available, price £1.20 inc p&p.