Heatley-ZoonosesOfWildlife
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Transcript Heatley-ZoonosesOfWildlife
J. Jill Heatley DVM MS DABVP (Avian), DACZM
Associate Professor, Zoological Medicine
College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences
Texas A&M University, College Station
Gray...
Tassel-eared...Sciurus aberti
Fox
Eastern Fox....Sciurus niger
Apache Fox.....Sciurus apache
Tamiascirus
Western - Sciurus griseus
Eastern – Sciuris carolinensis
Arizona ...Sciurus arizonensis
American Red.....Tamiasciurus hudsonicus
Chickaree......Tamiasciurus douglasi
Flying Squirrels –
Northern
Southern and Glaucomys volans
Order Rodentia
Family Sciuridae
All continents
Except Antarctica, Australia
50 genera, 273 species
Subfamily
Cyonomys – Prairie Dogs
Spermophilus – Ground squirrels
Marmota – Marmots
Ammospermophilus – Antelope Squirrels
Tamias – Chipmunks
Tamiasciurus – Chickarees
Sciurus – Tree Squirrels
Glaucomys – New World flying squirrels
Expanding urban
communities
Parks, neighborhoods
Bird feeders
Nature
Vacation
Exotic Pets
Research
Rehabilitation
Hunting
Bacterial
Fungal
Parasitic
Viral
Prion
Literature review
Toxoplasma gondii
Cryptosporidium parvum
Intermediate not
definitive host
Eastern gray squirrel
Chipmunk
Red squirrel
California Gray squirrel
Hymenolepis nana
Dwarf tapeworm of hamsters
Human enteric disease
Praziquantel
Mange in squirrels is
generally notoedric or
demodectic and not
transmissable to
humans
Lyme Disease
Epidemic Typhus
Tularemia
Plague
Leptospirosis
Rat Bite fever
Squirrel Bite fever
Streptobaccillus
moniliformis
Spirillum minus
Campylobacter spp.
Salmonellosis
Pasteurella multocida
Yersinia pseudotuberculosis
Red legged ground
squirrel
Xerus erythropus
Nigeria
Zoonoses
Red squirrel
White tailed antelope squirrel
Citellus lecurus
Yersinia enterocolitica
Grey squirrel
Squirrel Disease
Tularemia
Isolated in 1912
Plague like disease of rodents
Bacterium tularense
Plague foci search
Francisella tularensis
Tulare county of origin, CA
Ground squirrels Spermophilus beecheyii
Zoonoses
Sciurus carolinensis
Prairie Dog (BT Cyonomys ludovicianus)
Infant Bite Arkansas
Titer positive
3 y with bite
Fox Squirrel
Skinned/dressed
Magee JS et al. Tularemia trans by Squirrel Bite. Pediatric Infect Dis J.1989Feb8(2):123-5.
Avashia SB at al Emerging Infec Dis 10(3) March 2004
Kirkwood T. Tularemia from the Fox Squirrel JAMA 1931; 96(12);941-942
Leptospirosis
Multiple species
Isolations - serovars
Gray squirrel - ballum
Fox squirrel - grippotyphosa
Zoonosis
Leptospira kirschneri
Southern Flying squirrel
Glaucomys volans
Exported to Japan
28 29 yo males
Borrelia burgdorferi sensu latu
Spirochetal bacteria
Debilitating chronic infection
Tick intermediate
Reservoirs
Western Gray squirrel
Eastern chipmunk
Most common tick borne disease
Tamias straitus – eastern & upper midwestern US
Persistent infection, no clinical signs
Ixodes scapularis
European reservoir potential
Gray squirrel Sciurus carolinensis
European tree squirrel – S. vulgaris
Bacterium
Rickettsia prowazekii
Clinical Signs
Fever, Headache, Muscle
pain
Rash – trunk spreads to
extremities
Doesn’t involve the palms or
soles (cf RMSF)
Mort ~ 40% if untreated
Primary Vector
Human Body Louse
Sporadic cases in Eastern US since 1970s
Flying squirrels
Most cases in winter when squirrels nest in
attics
All non fatal, humans faster recovery with
antibiotics
Glaucomys volans
Handled, squirrels nests, pets in home
Capable reservoirs
Transient inapparent infection
Squirrel human transmission unknown
Sucking lice (Neohematopinus
sciuropteri)
Fleas transmit to squirrels in lab
Direct contact, inhalation of dried
squirrel excretions
bites of squirrel ectoparasites
Sucking lice
Flea
Bacterium - Yersinia pestis
Complex flea rodent cycle
Sylvatic reservoir
Human clinical signs
Severe disease
Fatality rate > 50% if untreated
Rare - Dozen cases / year
Semiarid West
New Mexico
Arizona
Colorado
California
Periodic plague outbreaks
More susceptible rodent hosts
Prairie dogs
Known reservoir
Ground squirrels
Fox squirrels
Human exposure occurs during
outbreaks
Flea vector (Flea control!!!)
CS: nonspecific: lethargy, depression, respiratory
distress, lymphadenopathy, anorexia
Serologic testing
Flea bites
Direct contact w nonrodent hosts
Trend of eastward expansion
Epizootic fox squirrels central Texas
Dermatophytosis
Sporotrichosis
Sporothrix schenckii
Unknown Sciurid, not captured
Bite 1.5 months earlier in the park
Severe arm lesion responded to 3 months of
antibiotic and antifungal therapy
Lymphocutaneous Sporotrichosis Associated with a Squirrel Bite: Case Report and Review
PS Saravanakumar, P Eslami FA Zar Clinical Infectious Diseases, 23(3)3 Sep 1996) 647-648.
Dermatomycoses, Tinea,
“Ringworm”
May accompany parapox
fibromas
Circular shape, scaly raised
border
Patchy hair loss
Systemic Phycomycosis
Neck , head ,armpits,
abdomen
Skin reddening, thin layer
serous exudate, crusts, skin
nodules
Hair broken off at skin
surface,
Fine stubble broken hair
Lesions
Lewis et
al. JWD
Oct 1975
Urban
Gray
squirrel
mycology
Etiologies
Trichophyton mentagrophytes
Mucor
Candida albicans
Microsporum gypseum,
Scopulaiopsis brevicaulis
Microsporum cookei
Systemic Phycomycosis
Dermatiaceous Fungi –
pigmented Phaeoannellomyces
wernecklii
Damp weather conditions
Prevalence > 50%
Rule out Alopecia
Sciurus carolinensis
Glaucomys volans
Dietary, heritable?
Congenital Alopecia
Dermatophytosis
Louse Bite Lesions
Notoedric Mange
Larval Harvest Mite Lesions
Histology
Fungal organisms in superficial
skin, in and around hairs
History, Lesions
Direct examination
Culture
Identify specific fungus
Zoonotic
Young animals more
commonly affected
One researcher developed
lesions after handling squirrels
Use gloves, wash with soap
after handling
Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Virus
Gray squirrels serologically positive UK 4/19
Snowshoe
hare virus (SSHV)
Arboviruses
West Nile Virus
Western Equine Encephalitis
Lacross Virus
Eastern Equine Encephalitis
Rabies
Gray squirrel
No human cases associated with squirrel bite
Monkeypox Virus
Encephalomyocarditis virus
White et al. Micro Study of Urban Gray squirrel 1975 JAVMA 167
Alphaviruses, Togaviridae
WEE rare disease in people
Lacrosse Virus, EEE (mort 50%), VEE rare serious disease
Mosquito vector
Hosts (Black tailed jack rabbit, White footed mouse?, ?)
Lacrosse Encephalitis –
WEE Viremia –
Gray squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis), California ground
squirrels, San Joachin antelope ground squirrels,
Aggressive, bite people, Usu fatal, may survive overwinter
Richardson’s ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii)
contaminated urine, cannibalism
Experimental Infection
Weak, depressed, ataxic, limb paralysis prior to death
Some became hyperexcitable
Brain, brainstem Necrosis & edema
EEE - Gray squirrels
Tree squirrels and chipmunks primary amplifying hosts
Peripheral inoculation: Encephalitis & death
VEE – Significant viremia, > 50% mort
Mexican ground squirrel - Spermophilus mexicanus
Gray squirrel
Bunyaviridae
Variant of the La Crosse virus
Encephalitis occasional - NY, Eastern Canada
Antibodies
Experimental infection ground squirrels
Artic ground squirrels
Spermophilus lateralis
Yellow-pine chipmunks
Spermophilus parryii
Golden mantled ground squirrels
Symptomless viremia
Eutamias amoenus
Red squirrels
Encephalitis virus
Fox squirrel (Sciurus niger)
Seroconversion late summer early fall
None in urine, fleas
Exp: feces and oral cavity
Experimental infection suggests amplifying host
High seroprevalence
Western gray squirrel (S. griseus)
Eastern gray squirrel (S. carolinensis)
3/36 live neurologic tree squirrels viremia
similar to WNV-infected birds.
Most squirrels no virus in serum
S. carolinensis
not amplifying hosts
low viremias, lack of mortality
Low seroprevalence 2%
Useful as sentinels
High seroprevalence
Tick
1956 epidemic of people and monkeys
borne encephalitis flavivirus complex
Fever,
hypotension hepatomegaly,
hemorrhage/neuro/bronchopneumonia
recovery/late fever
Southern india - 2500 m radius
Striped
palm squirrels
Funambulus tristriatus
Antibodies
Viremic infective for Ticks
Orthopox virus
Broad primate host range includes humans
Infection via direct contact
Main host African tree squirrels
Tree squirrels
Heliosciurus rufobrachium
H. gambianus
Rope Squirrels
Fever rash resembles small pox
Low mortality high morbidity
Funisciuris anerythrus
F. lemniscatus
Prairie dogs
Poorly competent host
Effective transmitters for veterinary staff
Diseases
Infectious
Monkey Pox
Humans 1-10% mortality
Contact, respiratory droplets
CS: fever, cough, conjunctivitis,
lymphadenopathy, nodular rash
No treatment
Strict biosecurity, humane
euthanasia
CDC website
www.cdc.gov/ncidod/monkeypox
Final rule prohibits
capture, offers to capture,
transport, sale, barter, exchange,
distribution, or release of a listed
animal into the environment.
Prairie dogs (Cynomys sp.)
African Tree squirrels (Heliosciurus
sp.),
Rope squirrels (Funisciurus sp.),
Gambian giant pouched rats
Cricetomys sp.
Encephalomyocarditis Virus
Genus cardiovirus
AKA: Mengovirus
Worldwide/Ubiquitous disease of rodents
Human: suspected neurologic disease
Now thought to be asymptomatic
Isolated from feces/intestinal contents
Sciurus spp.
Red squirrels
Wild squirrels (Vizoso et al 1964)
Where/ how viral persistence between epidemics unclear
Acute death due to cardiac necrosis
Important for zoo collection, elephants
Chimpanzee, Orangutan
Poorly infectious for people
Squirrel brains
Creutzfeldt-Jakob
“burgoo”
Squirrel brain stew
5 patients 56-78y
Unrelated, Different towns
disease (CJD)
Rural Kentucky
Don’t eat brain unless you want
be a zombie
Summary
Squirrels are
harbor a plethora of zoonoses
Sentinel
Is it the cute factor?
Thanks for your attention
Field
Manual of Wildlife Diseases in the
Southeastern United States, 3rd ed
Davidson, WR
Zoo
& Wild Animal Medicine 5th ed
Sainsbury, Rodent Chapter
Infectious Diseases of
Wild Mammals
ES Wiliams, IK Barker
Smithsonian Museum
of Natural History
North American Mammals
http://www.mnh.si.edu/mna/main.cfm
Clostridium botulinum
Saravanakuma
PS Eslami P Zar FA
Lymphocutaneous sporotrichosis associated with
a squirrel bite: case report and review.
Clin Infect Dise 1996 sep 23(3) 647-8
Squirrel Fibroma
AKA Squirrel Pox
Squirrel Pox Virus
Leporipoxvirus
Related to Shope’s Fibroma of rabbits
Range
1953
Range: Maryland, New York, Virginia,
Michigan, North Carolina, Ontario
Host
Gray squirrel
Fox Squirrel
Red squirrel
Significant cause of decline
Experimental infections
Woodchucks, rabbits
Squirrel Fibroma
Lesions
Limited to skin
Raised flattened nodules
Light colored, little fur
1/16- 1 inch diameter
Single or wide dissemination
Epizootic
Metastasis to the lungs, liver, kidney, and lymph nodes has
been reported.
Secondary infection
Vision obstruction
Lesions on the eyelid
Swelling, discoloration, necrosis of leg or foot
Clinical Signs
Most infections self limiting, spontaneously regress
Debilitation, emaciation, death
Rare epizootics
Morbidity, mortality many squirrels
Florida
www.michigan.gov/dnr
Parasite-mediated competition
Parapoxvirus: Grey
& Red Squirrels
Mosquito
spread