Wynne Parry, LiveScience Senior Writer,
2/24/2012
In south-central
Illinois, rare rattlesnakes have been dying from what appears to be aggressive
fungal infections that cause grotesque facial lesions.
"What is
kind of scary about it is it loves the skin, but once it gets through the skin,
it will invade muscle and bone and it is extremely destructive," said
Matthew Allender, a wildlife veterinarian affiliated with the University of
Illinois who has been studying these infections."I've never quite seen
anything like this in a reptile."
Since 2008,
four confirmed and two probable cases have turned up in a population of eastern
massasauga rattlesnakes of about 50 to 60 individuals. (This species of snakes
are candidates for listing under the federal Endangered Species Act.) Allender
has tried, unsuccessfully, to treat two of these cases, but all have been
fatal.
A
soil-dwelling fungus, Chrysosporium, appears to be responsible. It is a
not-too-distant relative of another soil fungus turned killer. Geomyces destructans was recently
confirmed as the cause of white-nose syndrome, which has been decimating bat
populations in the eastern U.S. after first being spotted in a cave near
Albany, N.Y., in 2006.
Fungal
pathogens have been increasingly associated with epidemics in wildlife, he
notes in a report published in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases in December. Amphibians around the
planet have been devastated by chytridiomycosis, a fungal disease.
Allender
suspects the handful of cases he's seen among the eastern massasauga
rattlesnakes are just the tip of a larger phenomenon. Other biologists have
told him they have seen similar infections accompanied by the fungus in
rattlesnake populations in the northeastern United States.
"We are
at the early stage where white-nose syndrome was four years ago, where they had
all these outbreaks they were starting to see, then starting to
investigate," Allender said.
The eastern
massasauga rattlesnakes were once plentiful, but loss of habitat has reduced
their numbers and driven them into closer quarters.
This gives
rise to one possible scenario that might explain the outbreak of the disease:
Once crowded together, the snakes are more likely to interact and pass the
fungus to one another. Chrysosporium may also represent a new and devastating "superbug,"or there may be something in the
environment that is weakening the snakes' immune systems, leaving them more
vulnerable to an infection they could once fight off, Allender said.
Allender is
collaborating with biologist Michael Dreslik of the Illinois Natural History
Survey Prairie Research Institute, who conducts the population surveys that
have uncovered the sick rattlesnakes. This year's survey will begin in the
coming month, Allender said.
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