Cassirer E Frances, Besser Thomas E
Idaho Department of Fish and Game Lewiston Idaho USA.
Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Pathology Washington State University Pullman Washington USA.
Ecol Evol. 2025 May 13;15(5):e70869. doi: 10.1002/ece3.70869. eCollection 2025 May.
Pneumonia is a pervasive, population-limiting disease of bighorn sheep () with limited options for management. We conducted a selective removal experiment in two regions (north and south) of the Hells Canyon bighorn sheep metapopulation to test the hypothesis that pneumonia is maintained in bighorn sheep populations by chronic carriers of the bacterium . We detected in 83 adults over 11 years across seven study populations. We removed five carriers of and nine non-carriers from two treatment populations in northern Hells Canyon and 15 chronic carriers from a treatment population in southern Hells Canyon. We did not remove any sheep from four control populations. Local elimination of in the two northern treatment populations within a year after removals was indicated by no further detection of the pathogen, waning antibody levels, and lack of antibody in animals born after removals. Elimination in treatment populations was followed by fadeout of in the four adjacent control populations over the next 4 years without any further removals. Selective removals were associated with a decline in prevalence but did not eliminate in the southern treatment population. Clearance of infection led to nearly doubling of survival over the first 4 months of life, a 74% increase in recruitment to 7-10 months of age, and an increase in the average annual rate of population growth from 1% to 12%. The results of this experiment provide support for a focus on carriers of for mitigating low lamb recruitment associated with pneumonia-induced mortality observed in many bighorn sheep populations across North America. However, mixed outcomes indicate that a better understanding of infection persistence and fadeout could increase the effectiveness of management interventions.
肺炎是一种普遍存在且限制大角羊种群数量的疾病,管理手段有限。我们在地狱峡谷大角羊集合种群的两个区域(北部和南部)进行了一项选择性清除实验,以检验肺炎在大角羊种群中由该细菌的慢性携带者维持的假设。在11年里,我们在7个研究种群中检测了83只成年大角羊。我们从地狱峡谷北部的两个处理种群中清除了5只该细菌的携带者和9只非携带者,并从地狱峡谷南部的一个处理种群中清除了15只慢性携带者。我们没有从4个对照种群中清除任何大角羊。在清除后的一年内,北部两个处理种群中该细菌的局部清除表现为未再检测到病原体、抗体水平下降以及清除后出生的动物体内缺乏抗体。处理种群中该细菌被清除后,在接下来的4年里,4个相邻对照种群中的该细菌也逐渐消失,且没有进行任何进一步的清除。选择性清除与患病率下降有关,但在南部处理种群中并未消除该细菌。感染的清除导致出生后头4个月的存活率几乎翻倍,7至10个月龄的补充率提高了74%,种群年平均增长率从1%提高到了12%。该实验结果支持了将重点放在该细菌携带者上,以减轻北美许多大角羊种群中与肺炎诱导的死亡率相关的低幼羔补充率问题。然而,混合的结果表明,更好地理解感染的持续存在和消失情况可能会提高管理干预的有效性。