Showing posts with label Trauma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trauma. Show all posts

Friday, February 12, 2016

MASS ANIMAL DIE-OFF: Mysterious Mass Death Of Monkeys In Central America - 40 Howlers Dead In Recent Months, With Relatively Full Stomachs And No Signs Of Trauma; Scientists Are Baffled; Could This Be Related To Zika Or Other Mosquito-Borne Diseases?!

A dead howler monkey found in the woods in southern Nicaragua.© Paso Pacifico

February 12, 2016 - CENTRAL AMERICA - Scientists are investigating the mysterious die-off of dozens of monkeys in Central America, including the possibility that they have contracted Zika or another virus that could be passed to humans.

In recent months, around 40 howler monkeys have been found dead or dying in the tropical rainforests of Nicaragua. The animals have all had relatively full stomachs and no obvious signs of trauma. Experts fear there may be many more cases that have not been reported.

"Wild animals die off all the time, but it is really unusual to see this many deaths in such a short time with no apparent reason," said Kim Williams-Guillen, a conservation Ph.D. who has been researching in Nicaragua's jungles since 1999. "I have never seen anything like it."


"These deaths are worth investigating, not just from a conservation standpoint, but from a public health standpoint. It is very important we get to the bottom of this."


WATCH: Nicaragua Howler Monkey Die-off Signals New Viral Outbreak?




Primates are highly susceptible to mosquito-borne diseases, and outbreaks among them could be a precursor to the spread of disease among humans, although scientists are careful to warn that this leap remains rare.

Complicating the mystery is the fact that howler monkeys are immune to dengue but are highly vulnerable to yellow fever. Yet Nicaragua has been declared free of that disease for years.

What is less clear is how the primates will respond to Zika and chikungunya, both of which are related to yellow fever and have just arrived in the Western Hemisphere in the last couple of years.

Nicaragua has reported 29 cases of Zika so far. Meanwhile, chikungunya has infected more than 100,000 people across Central America since first arriving there in 2014.

Among the numerous unknowns is whether howler monkeys would even exhibit symptoms if they became infected with either virus.

"It is just not something that has been researched yet, how or whether they would affect primates," adds Williams-Guillen, who is conservation director at Paso Pacifico, an environmental nonprofit working in Central America's Pacific jungles.

The group is now coordinating with scientists from the University of California, Davis, to come up with a definitive diagnosis for whatever it is that is killing off the monkeys.

In addition to the possibility of a virus, the researchers will also probe other factors that might be at work, including drought and other environmental variables.

The first challenge is to take hair, skin and other samples from a recently deceased animal and then transport it to Davis.


Red Howler Monkey babies are seen at the Hacienda Miraderos forests in the Municipality of Armenia, Antioquia, Colombia, December 14, 2015.© Fredy Builes/Reuters


Liliana Cortez Ortiz, a University of Michigan researcher and member of the International Primate Specialist Group of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, said this kind of unexplained die-off of apparently healthy animals is unusual, but not unprecedented.

"Any instances in which primates are dying from unknown causes is potentially a concern for humans as well," she added. "We simply don't know why this is happening and we need to find out."

Despite their cute appearance and size, typically weighing around 17 to 20 pounds, howler monkeys are actually the loudest land animals on the planet.

That's because they have large, hard, hollow throats, which they use to project roars that can travel for miles across the jungle. To the untrained ear, they sound more like a big cat than a fluffy monkey.

But now that they are apparently suffering from a mystery disease, they also face a new threat, warns Cortez Ortiz: humans.

"Now that we know they are dying, it is possible that local people may become scared and take matters into their own hands, killing the monkeys deliberately out of fear," she said.

"It is very important that they message gets out in Nicaragua that that is not the way to handle this, and these monkeys are not a danger to humans." - PRI.






Thursday, January 30, 2014

MASS BIRD DIE-OFF: "Never Seen Anything Like It" - Hundreds Of Dead Birds Found In Burleson, Texas?!

January 30, 2014 - TEXAS, UNITED STATES - A strange scene prompted a lot of calls from concerned motorists Thursday morning: Dead starlings and grackles scattered on and around the Interstate-35W south service road at Alsbury Boulevard.


A strange scene prompted a lot of calls from concerned motorists Thursday morning: Dead starlings and grackles
scattered on and around the Interstate-35W south service road at Alsbury Boulevard.   Credit: WFAA

"The ones we found in the grass did not have any signs of trauma we could see," said Burleson animal control supervisor Kim Peckler.

Crews collected just over 200 dead birds, and one that died a short time later. Peckler said she’s never seen anything like it in her 25 years of working with animal control.

Veterinarian Bob Denton did an initial search for clues.

"The first thing I noticed on this bird is his liver is enlarged," he said, examining a male grackle.

He said one bird had signs of sinus infection.


A strange scene prompted a lot of calls from concerned motorists Thursday morning: Dead starlings and grackles
scattered on and around the Interstate-35W south service road at Alsbury Boulevard.   Credit: WFAA

"The big thing you would worry about is toxins," he said. "Or maybe a virus."

Dr. Denton called the Texas Veterinarian Diagnostic Lab at A&M.

An avian expert told him the bird die-off probably is nothing to worry about.

"He actually said it's very common. You'll see that this time of year," Denton said.


WATCH: Hundreds of birds found dead along I-35W in Burleson.

                       


He was told large groups of birds often die together due to a combination of cold weather swings, disease, and lack of food.

Denton looked closely at the grackle’s intestines during an autopsy.

"It doesn't look like he's eaten at all. His GI tract is completely empty,” he said. “No food in his crop. Completely empty."

It could take weeks to learn whether the birds died from something other than natural causes. - WFAA.