In Might this 12 months, a seal at a well-liked seaside in Cape City, South Africa, bit 5 surfers in a matter of minutes. The surfers laughed it off with attribute nonchalance, however seal consultants had been involved as a result of this extraordinarily uncommon behaviour appeared a part of what was changing into a sample.
Six days earlier, on the opposite aspect of the town, a seal had washed up with horrific facial accidents that would solely have been attributable to a severely aggressive animal.
Beginning in late 2021, authorities famous with concern an uptick in seal aggression. Whereas most seals continued to disregard folks, just a few seemingly “deranged” animals had began biting folks or different animals with no provocation.
“Though the behaviour regarded ‘rabid’, our greatest scientific data was that seals don’t get rabies,” says Dr Tess Gridley, founding director of Sea Search, an NGO specialising in marine mammal analysis.
After the Might assaults, as public hypothesis spiked, a choice was made to ship 4 seals (the 2 beforehand talked about and two others) for rabies testing. “We had been desperately hoping it wouldn’t be rabies,” says Gridley.
The reply was surprising: three out of these 4 seals examined constructive for rabies. The quantity has since risen to 17.
What’s the present state of the outbreak?
On the time of writing, 17 seals alongside a 650km (404-mile) stretch of shoreline between Cape City and Plettenberg Bay have examined constructive for rabies. A few of these constructive assessments have come from animals euthanised for his or her aggressive behaviour for the reason that first case was confirmed, whereas others stem from retrospective testing of 130 specimens biobanked (preserved) by Sea Search as a part of an unrelated investigation over the previous three years. The variety of constructive instances – from each retrospective and future testing – is certain to rise.
Whereas analysis is ongoing, the newest sequencing means that the seals have a wildlife pressure of the virus.
“Our greatest guess is that the seals obtained it from black-backed jackals,” says Dr Brett Gardner, a veterinarian with a particular curiosity in illness epidemiology who relies on the College of Melbourne in Australia. Rabies is endemic amongst southern African jackals, which prey on seal pups in land-based colonies on the West Coast of South Africa and Namibia.
A minimum of one home canine in Cape City seems to have contracted rabies from a seal chunk. To this point, not one of the people who’ve been bitten by rabid seals have developed rabies.

Why are consultants so involved?
It’s the first outbreak of rabies amongst marine mammals wherever on the planet. The one different recognized case of a seal catching rabies happened within the Norwegian island of Svalbard in 1980 and was seen as an remoted incident.
“We merely don’t know what course the illness will take,” says Gardner. “And we’ve a great deal of questions on issues like transmission price. Will this resemble what we’re used to seeing in standard terrestrial mammals, or will it’s extra just like the surprising mass mortalities traditionally seen in kudu contaminated with rabies?”
Two million Cape fur seals stay alongside a 3,000km (1,864-mile) shoreline stretching from southern Angola to Algoa Bay on the east coast of South Africa. The seals spend days or even weeks at sea, however when on land they stay in crowded colonies the place their have to defend their private house ends in frequent fights and squabbles – which isn’t preferrred, contemplating rabies is primarily transmitted by saliva.
On a probably constructive notice, seals have much less saliva than land mammals – swallowing slimy fish whereas underwater doesn’t require a lot lubrication.
“We’re inspired by the truth that no people have developed rabies but,” says Gardner, who’s interested in why this can be. “Is the saltwater lowering the viral masses or partially inactivating the virus? Are folks’s neoprene wetsuits cleansing seals’ enamel earlier than they draw blood?
“We don’t know any of those solutions but.”
![A seal is tested for rabies in May 2024 [Courtesy of Sea Search]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/rabid-seals-Sea-Search-Sampling-20240527-Rabid-Seal-Muizenberg-CNadin-1723993583.jpg?w=770&resize=770%2C513)
Is it secure to go to the seaside in South Africa?
Surfers, swimmers, fishers and different water customers have been urged to proceed having fun with the ocean, however to take action with warning and to at all times stroll canine on leashes.
“There’s no have to panic in the event you see a relaxed seal,” says Gregg Oelofse, who heads up the coastal administration staff for the Metropolis of Cape City. “But when an animal appears frenzied or aggressive, please get out of its approach and alert fellow beachgoers and the authorities.”
Some extra non-specific indicators that an animal may need rabies are incoordination and different neurological indicators, Gardner says.
Lifeguards and shark spotters within the affected areas have been instructed to shut seashores if in any doubt, and firms providing seal snorkelling excursions have been left with no possibility however to stop operations.
Rabies is a slow-moving illness of the nervous system – it could possibly incubate for months and even years. As soon as it turns into symptomatic, nevertheless, it’s nearly at all times deadly, in all species.
If an individual is bitten, the wound ought to be washed with cleaning soap and water for quarter-hour. The subsequent step is to go to a health care provider for a shot of rabies immunoglobulin (which binds to the virus) and a course of rabies vaccines. With this plan of action, contracting rabies is extraordinarily unlikely.
What’s the most probably consequence of the outbreak?
Whereas each Gardner and Gridley emphasise that there is no such thing as a scientific precedent on the subject of rabies outbreaks amongst marine mammals, expertise of the illness in terrestrial animals suggests three attainable eventualities.
- The illness could possibly be eradicated by vaccination programmes. Nevertheless, with two million seals unfold throughout three international locations (Angola, Namibia, South Africa), this isn’t possible, particularly because the rabies vaccine requires a number of doses to be absolutely efficient and oral baiting with vaccines, which is finished for raccoons and coyotes, is out of the query.
- The illness turns into a low-level endemic amongst Cape fur seals, with occasional flare-ups such because the one presently being skilled. “The impact on the seal inhabitants stays unknown,” notes a Metropolis of Cape City press launch. “However in different animals, rabies sometimes pursues a ‘sluggish burn’ course of flares and declines, quite than leading to mass mortalities.”
- The illness turns into extra virulent, causes extra deaths and is extra widespread, as occurred with kudu in Namibia within the Seventies.
“Primarily based on what we all know to date, the second situation is by far the most probably,” says Gardner, who provides that the general public can relaxation assured that scientists around the globe are giving this their full consideration.

Is the entire ecosystem in danger?
Whereas the outbreak is on no account preferrred, it doesn’t seem – a minimum of for now – to be apocalyptic, both. Rabies impacts mammals solely, so there’s no want to fret about seagulls or penguins contracting it. And though dolphins or whales might technically catch it from seals, their behaviour patterns make this extraordinarily unlikely.
Scientists are most involved about vagrant seals from the subantarctic – particularly elephant seals, which get fairly near Cape fur seals – contracting the illness and taking it again to their house ranges. Whereas that is thought of extremely unlikely (there are only a handful of vagrants annually), there’s a plan to vaccinate all vagrant animals who go to, says Oelofse. There are additionally plans to vaccinate “harbour seals”, Cape fur seals that stay in harbours and are sometimes fed by people.
One native species that could be in danger is the Cape clawless otter, which does repeatedly work together with Cape fur seals – and has a a lot smaller, and extra susceptible whole inhabitants of between 21,000 and 30,000.
What subsequent?
“Coastal authorities will proceed to work carefully with state vets and scientists to implement ongoing proactive measures to handle the rabies outbreak responsibly,” says Oelofse.
One in all their main issues is that seals will congregate in huge teams when breeding season kicks off in October.
“I’m actually reassured by the proactive stance I’ve seen from everybody in South Africa,” says Gardner. “And I’m hopeful that they may be capable to euthanise drawback animals earlier than they get into the breeding colonies, however a bit nervous in the event that they don’t.”