Exclusive: Pathologists find what is believed to be the first evidence of the infection in the planet’s longest-lived vertebrate species

A stranded Greenland shark found off the coast of Cornwall died from meningitis, according to a postmortem, providing what is believed to be the first evidence of the disease in the species.

The 4-metre long shark, thought to be about 100 years old, was first discovered by a dog walker on 13 March on a beach near Penzance but was washed back into the sea before it could be properly examined. After a two-day search it was discovered floating in the water off Newlyn harbour beach by a tourist boat and a postmortem was carried out.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Kamala Harris family

kamala harris father, vice president 2020, howard university, Madam Vice President, kamala…

Last-minute bid to stop Shell’s oil exploration in whale breeding grounds in South Africa

Campaigners have filed legal challenge against seismic survey along Eastern Cape province…

Biased Bank of England blames pay for inflation, never profit | Phillip Inman

Data suggests prices are rising even though production costs are flat. Yet…

MS charities decry UK postcode lottery for ‘life-changing’ drug

Nearly 70,000 estimated to be missing out on drug available on NHS…