Date: April 17, 2019
Source: University of California - Davis
Scientists
report the first cases of foot disease for endangered huemul deer in Chilean
Patagonia in a study led by the Wildlife Conservation Society and the
University of California, Davis' One Health Institute, with partnering
institutions in Chile and the United States.
In the
study, published April 17 in the journal PLOS ONE, researchers found foot
lesions in 24 huemul deer in Chile's Bernardo O'Higgins National Park between
2005 and 2010. The park remains one of the few strongholds for the species,
which lives in the rugged mountainous terrain of southern Argentina and Chile.
The foot
disease causes severe pain, swelling, partial or complete loss of the hoof and
in many cases, death. Affected animals become unable to move and forage,
leaving them susceptible to starvation and predation.
Researchers
identified parapoxvirus as the likely cause of the disease. About 40 percent of
the 24 affected deer died, suggesting the virus could pose a considerable
conservation threat to the already vulnerable species.
"We
knew that deer were getting sick and dying from this disease for many years,
but we didn't know what was causing it," said corresponding author Marcela
Uhart, a wildlife veterinarian with the UC Davis One Health Institute and
director of the Latin America Program within UC Davis' Karen C. Drayer Wildlife
Health Center. "We're really excited that we found a potential cause for
this disease. Now we need to learn from it so we can be better prepared to help
this species."
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