Article
The Bacterial Infections in Sea Turtles That Often Go Undetected
Not every bacterial infection in sea turtles presents with dramatic lesions or sudden collapse. Some infections develop gradually over weeks or even months, producing subtle clinical signs that can easily be mistaken for stress, debilitation, malnutrition, or generalized weakness.
Reduced diving ability, lethargy, poor buoyancy control, chronic swelling, respiratory difficulty, unexplained weight loss, or persistent skin abnormalities may all indicate deeper bacterial disease. Because these signs are nonspecific, chronic infections are often recognized only after significant organ involvement has already occurred.
Among the most important bacterial agents linked with slow-progressing disease in sea turtles are Mycobacterium and Chlamydia species1,2,3,4.
Mycobacterial Disease Can Spread Quietly
Non-tuberculous mycobacteria are widely distributed in aquatic environments and have repeatedly been associated with granulomatous disease in marine turtles1,3,4. Unlike acute bacterial infections that produce rapid septicemia, mycobacterial infections tend to progress slowly and silently.
Mycobacterium chelonae has been linked with epidermal lesions, joint swelling, and disseminated infection involving the lungs, liver, spleen, kidneys, and pericardium in Kemp’s ridley turtles. In another case, a stranded loggerhead turtle developed tachypnea and respiratory distress before postmortem examination revealed widespread nodular lesions affecting multiple organs1.
One of the biggest diagnostic challenges is that granulomatous lesions caused by mycobacteria can resemble fungal infections, abscesses, neoplasia, or chronic inflammatory conditions. Animals may initially receive supportive care for nonspecific illness while the infection continues to spread internally.
Certain species, such as Mycobacterium haemophilum, may also require specialized culture conditions and prolonged incubation periods, increasing the chances of underdiagnosis1.
Chlamydial Infections May Be More Common Than Expected
Chlamydial organisms have also been identified in sea turtles with systemic and respiratory disease. In farmed green turtles, Chlamydial infection was associated with weakness, lethargy, inability to dive, and lesions affecting the liver, spleen, and heart1.
Further molecular investigations identified organisms related to Chlamydia abortus, Chlamydia pneumoniae, and Neochlamydia species within affected tissues1.
Interestingly, Chlamydial DNA has also been detected in clinically healthy loggerhead turtles undergoing rehabilitation. This finding suggests that asymptomatic carriers may exist within marine turtle populations, allowing infections to remain undetected for prolonged periods1.
Respiratory tissues and conjunctival surfaces appear to be important sites of bacterial localization, which may explain why some infected turtles initially present with mild respiratory or ocular abnormalities rather than severe systemic disease1.
Why These Infections Are Difficult to Diagnose
Chronic bacterial infections rarely follow a straightforward clinical pattern. Unlike acute wound infections or septicemia, these diseases may progress gradually with intermittent or vague signs.
Routine bacterial culture may not always identify the causative organism, particularly when dealing with slow-growing mycobacteria. Histopathology, acid-fast staining, molecular diagnostics, and careful necropsy evaluation often become essential for reaching a diagnosis.
Persistent swelling, granulomatous lesions, non-healing wounds, chronic respiratory disease, or unexplained decline should always prompt further investigation, especially in long-term rehabilitation cases.
Environmental stress, pollution exposure, fluctuating temperatures, and compromised immunity may further increase susceptibility to these infections, allowing opportunistic bacteria to establish chronic disease more easily.
Clinical Takeaway
Some of the most significant bacterial infections in sea turtles are also the easiest to overlook. Slow progression, vague clinical signs, and diagnostic difficulty often delay recognition until disease becomes advanced. Careful monitoring, repeated clinical assessment, and thorough diagnostic workups remain critical for identifying these hidden infections before extensive systemic damage occurs
Reference
- Ebani VV. Bacterial infections in sea turtles. Veterinary sciences. 2023 May 6;10(5):333. https://www.mdpi.com/2306-7381/10/5/333
- Pace A, Vicari N, Rigamonti S, Magnino S, Borrelli L, Dipineto L, Fioretti A, Hochscheid S, Tavares L, Duarte A. Detection of Chlamydial DNA from Mediterranean loggerhead sea turtles in Southern Italy. Animals. 2022 Mar 11;12(6):715. https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/12/6/715
- Sharma SK, Upadhyay V. Epidemiology, diagnosis & treatment of non-tuberculous mycobacterial diseases. Indian Journal of Medical Research. 2020 Sep 1;152(3):185-226. https://journals.lww.com/ijmr/_layouts/15/oaks.journals/downloadpdf.aspx?an=02223309-202052030-00005
- Carella F, Aceto S, Pollaro F, Miccio A, Iaria C, Carrasco N, Prado P, De Vico G. A mycobacterial disease is associated with the silent mass mortality of the pen shell Pinna nobilis along the Tyrrhenian coastline of Italy. Scientific reports. 2019 Feb 25;9(1):2725. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-37217-y.pdf
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