A toxic parasite “very different from anything” experts have seen before has killed four California sea otters and they’re concerned it could spread to other marine life and even humans. 

Melissa Miller with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife routinely examines dead sea otters as part of a decades-long state effort to help the recovery of the threatened species. 

But when she examined one dead otter in February 2020, she immediately knew she was seeing lesions she hadn’t seen before. Since then, three other dead otters have been found infected with a rare and deadly form of a common parasite found in cats, other animals and humans.

On Wednesday, Miller and other researchers published a study in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science, hoping to alert others to the parasite. They hope other marine mammal responders and scientists will be careful when handling sea otters to avoid spreading the parasite.

Toxic parasites 

Scientists have studied a common version of this parasite –Toxoplasma gondii –  in sea otters for decades. 

“In fact, it’s amazing how many otters are infected” with parasites, said Miller.

Toxoplasma can occur in any warm-blooded species, including humans, and has been deadly among Hawaiian monk seals, said co-author Devinn Marie Sinnott, a veterinary pathologist and doctoral student at the University of California Davis.  

Typically, toxoplasma kills sea otters slowly, in a “chronic, smoldering process,” Miller said. The strain documented in the California otters causes a more severe form of toxoplasmosis that appears to kill ”very fast.” 

This version – Toxoplasma gondii COUG – was named for the two mountain lions in British Columbia where it was first documented in 1995 during an investigation into a waterborne outbreak of toxoplasmosis in humans.