Virus responsible for killing almost 800 dolphins as part of dangerous epidemic now found in four whale deaths



A strand of the morbillivirus - which causes measles in humans - is responsible for wiping out 782 since July, with the number expected to rise

Four whales have now washed ashore off the East Coast of the U.S. infected with the virus

Experts are scrambling to determine whether the virus killed them or if they were just carriers



Marine officials say nothing can be done to protect the animals from the virus

A virus that has killed nearly 800 dolphins has now shown up in four whales, which washed ashore off the East Coast of America.



Government marine experts are working to determine whether the virus - cetacean morbillivirus - was responsible for the deaths.



If proven, the development would be of major concern to the global whale population, judging by the amount of dolphins the virus continues to kill.



Three humpback whales - which are listed as an endangered species - and one pygmy sperm whale have stranded since July 1.



They were found on shores between Massachusetts and Georgia, according to the Washington Post.



Troubling: Three humpback whales - like this one - and one pygmy sperm whale have washed ashore infected with crustacean morbillivirus, a virus responsilbe for the death of close to 800 dolphins. Experts are now trying to determine whether the virus was the cause of death for the whales

Just this year, there have been 14 whale strandings, which is double the six-year average of seven. This whale was found near Ocean Shores, Washington, on June 13, 2013

East Coast: The four infected whales washed ashore on the East Coast of the United States between Massachusetts and Georgia

There have been 14 humpback strandings - when dead or dying animals wash ashore - along the East Coast this year, which is double the six-year average of seven.



However only four of the whales have been proven carriers of morbillivirus.



While morbillivirus is known to infect whales, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have never reported a death from it.



The dolphin epidemic, however, continues to move at an unprecedented rate.



Between July 1 and Sunday, 782 have been confirmed dead.



That already surpasses the last major morbillivirus outbreak in 1987, when 740 were confirmed dead.



Third of the day: Virginia Aquarium Stranding Response Team members Liz Schell (left) and Krystal Rodrique (right) record their third deceased dolphin in Ocean View Beach in Norfolk, Virginia on Aug. 1, 2013

Sarah Rose from the Virginia Aquarium Stranding Response Team prepares for a necropsy on a dolphin that died from morbillivirus

The virus causes death by suppressing the dolphin's immune system, leaving them vulnerable to infections such as pneumonia.



Despite a similarity to the measles virus, it poses no threat to humans.



Sadly officials have said there is nothing they can do to protect dolphins in the wild.



Another round of dolphins have recently washed ashore in Florida, as they migrate south to warmer weather.



However they have not been included in the virus tally because proper tests have not been conducted.



Danielle Monaghan, a staffer at the Marine Mammal Stranding Center in Brigantine, New Jersey, photographs a dead dolphin that washed ashore on Aug. 21, 2013, in Spring Lake. This dolphin was the 63rd to die on New Jersey's shores since July

Teri Rowles, director of the marine mammal heath and stranding response program for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's fisheries service, said it is too early to say whether whales are able to be infected.



'There are too many unknowns right now,' she told the Washington Post.

