Oz Goffman
University of Haifa
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Publication
Featured researches published by Oz Goffman.
Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 2009
Alon Levy; Ori Brenner; Aviad Scheinin; Dan Morick; Eliana Ratner; Oz Goffman; Dan Kerem
We report an unusual snaring of the larynx in an adult, female common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). The dolphin was observed swimming and diving in Haifa Port, Israel, but was found dead the next day, 60 km south, on the coast. Postmortem examination revealed stranded-cordage, nylon filaments wrapped around the larynx, cutting through the soft tissue, and extending down into the forestomach, where a large mass of netting was found. The cachectic state of the dolphin and the subacute to chronic, hyper-plastic response of soft tissue surrounding the filaments lodged around the larynx, suggest a prolonged period of starvation, which led to the final weakness and wasting of the dolphin.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2014
Efrat Shoham-Frider; Dan Kerem; Mia Roditi-Elasar; Oz Goffman; Danny Morick; Olga Yoffe; Nurit Kress
In this paper we present the concentrations of Hg, Cd, Se, Pb, Cu, Mn, Zn and Fe in organs of 6 non-common specimens of cetaceans that were stranded along the Israeli Mediterranean coast (IMC), during 2002-2010: two fin whales, one minke whale, one Cuviers beaked whale, one rough-toothed dolphin, and one Rissos dolphin. Most of the specimens were calves stranded by accident. Concentrations of Hg and Cd were low in tissues of the baleen whales and higher in the toothed whales, with maximum concentrations of 1067 mg kg(-1) Hg in the liver of the Rissos dolphin and 29 mg kg(-1) Cd in the kidney of the Cuviers beaked whale. As far as we are aware, this is the first report of trace elements in baleen whales in the Eastern Mediterranean, and the first report of trace elements in minke whale and rough-toothed dolphin in the Mediterranean.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2016
Efrat Shoham-Frider; Oz Goffman; Yehudit Harlavan; Nurit Kress; Danny Morick; Mia Roditi-Elasar; Edna Shefer; Dan Kerem
Concentrations of Hg, Se, Cd, Cu, Zn, Fe, Mn and As, in kidney, liver, muscle and blubber from 7 specimens of Stenella coeruleoalba, stranded along the Israeli Mediterranean coast (IMC) from 2006 to 2011 (2011-series) were determined and compared to previous data on S. coeruleoalba from the IMC (2001-series). No differences were observed in essential and toxic elements concentrations, between the two series, except for hepatic Mn which was higher in the latter. Hg/Se molar ratios in blubber, kidney and liver increased linearly with log Hg concentrations, while muscle was more heterogenic in this respect. Means (±SD) of hepatic Hg concentrations (134±89 and 181±200mgkg(-1), from the 2011 and 2001 series, respectively) were similar to that found in 2007-2009 specimens from Spain, possibly reflecting the relatively high natural background levels of mercury in the Mediterranean Sea.
Medical Mycology | 2011
Daniel Elad; Danny Morick; Dan David; Aviad Scheinin; Gilad Yamin; Shlomo E. Blum; Oz Goffman
Neoscytalidium dimidiatum was isolated from two 12-18 cm abscesses in the lung and the mediastinal lymph nodes of a stranded Rissos dolphin (Grampus griseus). Histopathologic examination of samples of these organs revealed the presence of hyphae and sclerotic body-like fungal elements. Photobacterium damselae subsp. damselae was recovered from the dolphins organs which also were found to contain numerous Monorygma grimaldii cysts. No histopathological signs of morbillivirus infection were seen. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of N. dimidiatum infection in a sea mammal.
Advances in Marine Biology | 2016
D. Kerem; Oz Goffman; M. Elasar; N. Hadar; Aviad Scheinin; T. Lewis
Only recently included among the cetacean species thought to regularly occur in the Mediterranean, the rough-toothed dolphin (Steno bredanensis) is an obscure and enigmatic member of this ensemble. Preliminary genetic evidence strongly indicates an Atlantic origin, yet the Mediterranean distribution for this species is conspicuously detached from the Atlantic, with all authenticated records during the last three decades being east of the Sicilian Channel and most within the bounds of the Levantine Basin. These dolphins are apparently a small, relict population, probably the remnant of a larger one, contiguous with that in the Atlantic and nowadays entrapped in the easternmost and warmest province. Abundance data are lacking for the species in the Mediterranean. Configuring acoustic detection software to recognise the apparently idiosyncratic vocalisations of rough-toothed dolphins in past and future acoustic recordings may prove useful for potential acoustic monitoring. Evidence accumulated so far, though scant, points to seasonal occupation of shallow coastal waters. Vulnerability to entanglement in gill-nets, contaminants in the region, and the occurrence of mass strandings (possibly in response to anthropogenic noise), are major conservation concerns for the population in the Mediterranean Sea.
Veterinary Parasitology | 2018
Eyal Bigal; Danny Morick; Aviad Scheinin; Harold Salant; Asaf Berkowitz; Roni King; Yaniv Levy; Mar Melero; José Manuel Sánchez-Vizcaíno; Oz Goffman; Nir Hadar; Mia Roditi-Elasar; Dan Tchernov
Toxoplasma gondii has been described in several marine mammals around the world including numerous species of cetaceans, yet infection and transmission mechanisms in the marine environment are not clearly defined. The Israel Marine Mammal Research and Assistance Center has been collating a database of all marine mammal stranding events along the countrys national coastlines since 1993. In this study, we describe the molecular detection and characterisation of T. gondii in three common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) including one case of coinfection with herpesvirus. The animals were found stranded on the Mediterranean coast of Israel in May and November 2013. In one of the three cases, the dolphin was found alive and admitted to intensive care. To our knowledge, this is the first report of T. gondii infection of marine mammals in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. As this parasite acts as an indicator for marine pollution and marine mammal health, we believe these findings add important information regarding the state of the environment in this region.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2003
Mia Roditi-Elasar; Dan Kerem; Hava Hornung; Nurit Kress; Efrat Shoham-Frider; Oz Goffman; Ehud Spanier
Israel Journal of Zoology | 2000
Oz Goffman; Mia Roditi; Ehud Spanier; Dan Kerem; Tsila Shariv
Marine Mammal Science | 2001
Dan Kerem; Oz Goffman; Ehud Spanier
Israel Journal of Ecology & Evolution | 2013
Dan Kerem; Rafi Kent; Mia Roditi-Elasar; Oz Goffman; Aviad Scheinin; Pavel Gol'din