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Dive into the research topics where Patricia E. Rosel is active.

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Featured researches published by Patricia E. Rosel.


Science of The Total Environment | 2011

Relationship between persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and ranging patterns in common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) from coastal Georgia, USA

Brian C. Balmer; Lori H. Schwacke; Randall S. Wells; R. Clay George; Jennifer Hoguet; John R. Kucklick; Suzanne M. Lane; Anthony Martinez; William A. McLellan; Patricia E. Rosel; Teri Rowles; Kate Sparks; Todd Speakman; Eric S. Zolman; D. Ann Pabst

Bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) are apex predators in coastal southeastern U.S. waters; as such they are indicators of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in coastal ecosystems. POP concentrations measured in a dolphins blubber are influenced by a number of factors, including the animals sex and ranging pattern in relation to POP point sources. This study examined POP concentrations measured in bottlenose dolphin blubber samples (n=102) from the Georgia, USA coast in relation to individual ranging patterns and specifically, distance of sightings from a polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) point source near Brunswick, Georgia. Dolphin ranging patterns were determined based upon 5years of photo-identification data from two field sites approximately 40km apart: (1) the Brunswick field site, which included the Turtle/Brunswick River Estuary (TBRE), and (2) the Sapelo field site, which included the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve (SINERR). Dolphins were categorized into one of three ranging patterns from photo-identification data. Individuals with sighting histories exclusively within one of the defined field sites were considered to have either Brunswick or Sapelo ranging patterns. Individuals sighted in both field sites were classified as having a Mixed ranging pattern. Brunswick males had the highest concentrations of PCBs reported for any marine mammal. The pattern of PCB congeners was consistent with Aroclor 1268, a highly chlorinated PCB mixture associated with a Superfund site in Brunswick. PCB levels in Sapelo males were lower than in Brunswick males, but comparable to the highest levels measured in other dolphin populations along the southeastern U.S. Female dolphins had higher Aroclor 1268 proportions than males, suggesting that the highly chlorinated congeners associated with Aroclor 1268 may not be offloaded through parturition and lactation, as easily as less halogenated POPs. Individuals sighted farther from the Superfund point source had lower Aroclor 1268 proportions.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in blubber of common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast, USA

Brian C. Balmer; Gina M. Ylitalo; Lauren E. McGeorge; Keri A. Baugh; Daryle Boyd; Keith D. Mullin; Patricia E. Rosel; Carrie Sinclair; Randall S. Wells; Eric S. Zolman; Lori H. Schwacke

A number of studies were initiated in response to the Deepwater Horizon (DWH) oil spill to understand potential injuries to bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) that inhabit the northern Gulf of Mexico (NGoM) estuarine waters. As part of these studies, remote biopsy skin and blubber samples were collected from dolphins at six field sites that received varying degrees of oiling: Barataria Bay (BB), Chandeleur Sound West (CSW), Chandeleur Sound East (CSE), Mississippi Sound South (MSS), Mississippi Sound North (MSN), and St. Joseph Bay (SJ). Blubber samples from 108 male dolphins were analyzed for persistent organic pollutant (POP) concentrations, as high levels of POPs have been previously reported in other southeastern U.S. dolphins and the potential contribution of these compounds to adverse health effects in NGoM dolphins must be considered. Dolphin blubber levels of summed POPs (ΣPOPs) did not differ significantly across sites (F-test, P=0.9119) [μg/g lipid; geometric mean and 95% CI]; CSW [65.9 (51.4-84.6)], SJ [74.1 (53.0-104)], MSN [74.3 (58.7-93.9)], BB [75.3 (56.4-101)], CSE [80.5 (57.8-112)], and MSS [82.5 (65.9-103)]. Overall, POP concentrations were in the lower half of the range compared to previously reported concentrations from other southeastern U.S. sites. Increased dolphin mortalities have been ongoing in the NGoM and have been suggested to be linked with the DWH oil spill. In addition, lung disease, impaired adrenal function, and serum biochemical abnormalities have been reported in dolphins from BB, an area that was heavily oiled. The results of this study suggest that POPs are likely not a primary contributor to the poor health conditions and increased mortality observed in some populations of NGoM dolphins following the DWH oil spill.


Archive | 2013

A Review of Common Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus truncatus) in the Northern Gulf of Mexico: Population Biology, Potential Threats, and Management

Nicole L. Vollmer; Patricia E. Rosel

Abstract Common Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus truncatus) are one of the most abundant marine mammal species in the northern Gulf of Mexico (GOMx), a region where they are exposed to a variety of man-made and natural threats. In order to assess and minimize the impacts of these threats, it is important to understand how Bottlenose Dolphins live within and utilize their habitat in the GOMx. Much of what is understood regarding the biology, ecology, genetic, and life-history characteristics of Bottlenose Dolphins in the GOMx has been gathered from small-scale research projects conducted within inshore waters, and much less is understood about dolphins inhabiting coastal and offshore waters. Over thirty years ago, Shane et al. (1982) reviewed the literature on Bottlenose Dolphin research in the GOMx. The 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill has highlighted the environmental risks to wildlife in the GOMx and the need for an updated, comprehensive review of the current knowledge base and status of Bottlenose Dolphins. Here we summarize research conducted on Bottlenose Dolphins within US waters (inshore, coastal, and offshore) of the GOMx, building on the work presented in Shane et al. (1982) with work published since. We highlight what is currently known about Bottlenose Dolphin biology, ecology, and demographics, emphasize where knowledge is still lacking concerning Bottlenose Dolphins in this region, and summarize the major stressors faced by populations in the GOMx. We hope this review will aid researchers as they try to assess both the short- and long-term impacts from threats in the GOMx and may help direct future avenues of research to ensure effective conservation of Bottlenose Dolphins in this environmentally and economically important habitat.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Seasonal Variation in the Skin Transcriptome of Common Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) from the Northern Gulf of Mexico

Frances M. Van Dolah; Marion G. Neely; Lauren E. McGeorge; Brian C. Balmer; Gina M. Ylitalo; Eric S. Zolman; Todd Speakman; Carrie Sinclair; Nicholas M. Kellar; Patricia E. Rosel; Keith D. Mullin; Lori H. Schwacke

As long-lived predators that integrate exposures across multiple trophic levels, cetaceans are recognized as sentinels for the health of marine ecosystems. Their utility as sentinels requires the establishment of baseline health parameters. Because cetaceans are protected, measurements obtained with minimal disruption to free ranging animals are highly desirable. In this study we investigated the utility of skin gene expression profiling to monitor health and contaminant exposure in common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus). Remote integument biopsies were collected in the northern Gulf of Mexico prior to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (May 2010) and during summer and winter for two years following oil contamination (2010-2011). A bottlenose dolphin microarray was used to characterize the skin transcriptomes of 94 individuals from three populations: Barataria Bay, Louisiana, Chandeleur Sound, Louisiana, and Mississippi Sound, Mississippi/Alabama. Skin transcriptomes did not differ significantly between populations. In contrast, season had a profound effect on gene expression, with nearly one-third of all genes on the array differing in expression between winter and the warmer seasons (moderated T-test; p<0.01, fold-change≥1.5). Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in blubber changed concurrently, reaching >two-fold higher concentrations in summer compared to winter, due to a seasonal decrease in blubber thickness and loss of stored lipid. However, global gene expression did not correlate strongly with seasonally changing contaminant concentrations, most likely because the refractory, lipid-stored metabolites are not substrates for phase I or II xenobiotic detoxification pathways. Rather, processes related to cell proliferation, motility, and differentiation dominated the differences in expression in winter and the warmer seasons. More subtle differences were seen between spring and summer (1.5% of genes differentially expressed). However, two presumed oil-exposed animals from spring presented gene expression profiles more similar to the summer animals (presumed exposed) than to other spring animals. Seasonal effects have not previously been considered in studies assessing gene expression in cetaceans, but clearly must be taken into account when applying transcriptomic analyses to investigate their contaminant exposure or health status.


Archive | 2014

U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico marine mammal stock assessments, 2013

Gordon T. Waring; Elizabeth Josephson; Katherine Maze-Foley; Patricia E. Rosel; Timothy V. N. Cole; Laura Engleby; Lance Preston Garrison; Allison G. Henry; Keith D. Mullin; Christopher Orphanides; Richard M. Pace; Debra L. Palka; Marjorie Lyssikatos; Frederick W. Wenzel

1National Marine Fisheries Service, 166 Water St., Woods Hole, MA 02543 2National Marine Fisheries Service, 75 Virginia Beach Dr., Miami, FL 33149 3National Marine Fisheries Service, 219 Ft. Johnson Rd., Charleston, SC 29412 4National Marine Fisheries Service, 3209 Frederic St., Pascagoula, MS 39567 5Mote Marine Laboratory, 1600 Ken Thompson Pkwy., Sarasota, FL 34236 6Sea World, Inc., 7007 Sea World Dr., Orlando, FL 32821


Molecular Ecology | 2018

Demography or selection on linked cultural traits or genes? Investigating the driver of low mtDNA diversity in the sperm whale using complementary mitochondrial and nuclear genome analyses

Phillip A. Morin; Andrew D. Foote; C. Scott Baker; Brittany L. Hancock-Hanser; Kristin Kaschner; Bruce R. Mate; Sarah L. Mesnick; Victoria L. Pease; Patricia E. Rosel; Alana Alexander

Mitochondrial DNA has been heavily utilized in phylogeography studies for several decades. However, underlying patterns of demography and phylogeography may be misrepresented due to coalescence stochasticity, selection, variation in mutation rates and cultural hitchhiking (linkage of genetic variation to culturally‐transmitted traits affecting fitness). Cultural hitchhiking has been suggested as an explanation for low genetic diversity in species with strong social structures, counteracting even high mobility, abundance and limited barriers to dispersal. One such species is the sperm whale, which shows very limited phylogeographic structure and low mtDNA diversity despite a worldwide distribution and large population. Here, we use analyses of 175 globally distributed mitogenomes and three nuclear genomes to evaluate hypotheses of a population bottleneck/expansion vs. a selective sweep due to cultural hitchhiking or selection on mtDNA as the mechanism contributing to low worldwide mitochondrial diversity in sperm whales. In contrast to mtDNA control region (CR) data, mitogenome haplotypes are largely ocean‐specific, with only one of 80 shared between the Atlantic and Pacific. Demographic analyses of nuclear genomes suggest low mtDNA diversity is consistent with a global reduction in population size that ended approximately 125,000 years ago, correlated with the Eemian interglacial. Phylogeographic analysis suggests that extant sperm whales descend from maternal lineages endemic to the Pacific during the period of reduced abundance and have subsequently colonized the Atlantic several times. Results highlight the apparent impact of past climate change, and suggest selection and hitchhiking are not the sole processes responsible for low mtDNA diversity in this highly social species.


Marine Genomics | 2017

Skin Transcriptomes of common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) from the northern Gulf of Mexico and southeastern U.S. Atlantic coasts

Marion G. Neely; Jeanine S. Morey; Paul E. Anderson; Brian C. Balmer; Gina M. Ylitalo; Eric S. Zolman; Todd Speakman; Carrie Sinclair; Melannie J. Bachman; Kevin Huncik; John R. Kucklick; Patricia E. Rosel; Keith D. Mullin; Teri Rowles; Lori H. Schwacke; Frances M. Van Dolah

Common bottlenose dolphins serve as sentinels for the health of their coastal environments as they are susceptible to health impacts from anthropogenic inputs through both direct exposure and food web magnification. Remote biopsy samples have been widely used to reveal contaminant burdens in free-ranging bottlenose dolphins, but do not address the health consequences of this exposure. To gain insight into whether remote biopsies can also identify health impacts associated with contaminant burdens, we employed RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) to interrogate the transcriptomes of remote skin biopsies from 116 bottlenose dolphins from the northern Gulf of Mexico and southeastern U.S. Atlantic coasts. Gene expression was analyzed using principal component analysis, differential expression testing, and gene co-expression networks, and the results correlated to season, location, and contaminant burden. Season had a significant impact, with over 60% of genes differentially expressed between spring/summer and winter months. Geographic location exhibited lesser effects on the transcriptome, with 23.5% of genes differentially expressed between the northern Gulf of Mexico and the southeastern U.S. Atlantic locations. Despite a large overlap between the seasonal and geographical gene sets, the pathways altered in the observed gene expression profiles were somewhat distinct. Co-regulated gene modules and differential expression analysis both identified epidermal development and cellular architecture pathways to be expressed at lower levels in animals from the northern Gulf of Mexico. Although contaminant burdens measured were not significantly different between regions, some correlation with contaminant loads in individuals was observed among co-expressed gene modules, but these did not include classical detoxification pathways. Instead, this study identified other, possibly downstream pathways, including those involved in cellular architecture, immune response, and oxidative stress, that may prove to be contaminant responsive markers in bottlenose dolphin skin.


Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2014

Review of historical unusual mortality events (UMEs) in the Gulf of Mexico (1990-2009): Providing context for the multi-year northern Gulf of Mexico cetacean UME declared in 2010

J. Litz; Melody A. Baran; Sabrina R. Bowen-Stevens; Ruth H. Carmichael; Kathleen M. Colegrove; Lance P. Garrison; Spencer E. Fire; Fougeres E; Ron Hardy; Secret Holmes; Wanda Jones; Blair Mase-Guthrie; Daniel K. Odell; Patricia E. Rosel; Jeremiah T. Saliki; Delphine Shannon; Steve F. Shippee; Suzanne M. Smith; Elizabeth Stratton; Mandy C. Tumlin; Heidi Whitehead; Graham A. J. Worthy; Teresa K. Rowles


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2003

Source of Aegean Sea harbour porpoises

Patricia E. Rosel; Alexandros Frantzis; Christina Lockyer; Anastasia Komnenou


Endangered Species Research | 2014

Genetic evidence reveals a unique lineage of Bryde’s whales in the northern Gulf of Mexico

Patricia E. Rosel; Lynsey A. Wilcox

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Keith D. Mullin

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Eric S. Zolman

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Lori H. Schwacke

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Brian C. Balmer

Chicago Zoological Society

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Carrie Sinclair

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Todd Speakman

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Gordon T. Waring

National Marine Fisheries Service

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Richard M. Pace

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Allison G. Henry

National Marine Fisheries Service

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