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Tracks in the Sand: Saving the Catalina Island Fox
However, until recently, endangered foxes on California’s Catalina Island were suffering from one of the highest prevalence of tumors ever documented in a wildlife population, UC Davis scientists have found. But treatment of ear mites appears to be helping the wild animals recover.
Roughly half of adult foxes examined between 2001 and 2008 had tumors in their ears, with about two-thirds of those malignant, according to a UC Davis study published in the Journal PLOS ONE.
More than 98 percent of the foxes were also infected with ear mites. These mites appear to be a predisposing factor for ear tumors in the Santa Catalina Island fox.
Luckily for the foxes, the story doesn’t stop there.
“It established a high prevalence of both tumors and ear mites, and hypothesized that there was something we could potentially do about it, which appears to be significantly helping this population,” said Winston Vickers, lead author of the prevalence study and associate veterinarian with the UC Davis Wildlife Health Center at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.
Working closely with researchers from the Institute for Wildlife Studies and Catalina Island Conservancy, the scientists conducted one of the few studies to estimate disease prevalence in an entire free-living wildlife population.
Rare success story:
A complementary study, also led by UC Davis and published in PLOS ONE, found that treatments with acaracide, a chemical agent used to kill ear mites in dogs and cats, reduced the prevalence of ear mite infection dramatically, from 98 percent to 10 percent among treated foxes at the end of the six-month trial. Ear canal inflammation and other signs of developing ear tumors also dropped.
“It’s rare to have a success story,” said the ear mite study’s lead author, Megan Moriarty, a student with the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. . .when the study began and currently a staff research associate at the UC Davis Wildlife Health Center. “It was interesting to see such striking results over a relatively short time period.”
Santa Catalina Island foxes are intensively managed by the Catalina Island Conservancy. In 2009, when the mite treatment study began, the Conservancy added acaracide to the variety of preventative treatments they administer to the foxes each year.
The Conservancy confirms that, in the years since, the overall prevalence of ear mites has dramatically declined in the areas they normally catch and treat foxes, as have the rates of tissue masses in the ear canals, suggesting reduced tumor presence.
“The annual prophylactic acaracide treatment has greatly improved the overall condition of the foxes’ ear canals,” said Julie King, the Conservancy’s director of Conservation and Wildlife Management and co-author of both studies. “Within just a few months post treatment, the presence of wax, infection, inflammation, and pigmentation virtually disappear. We have also noted an apparent reduction in the number of tumors observed, despite the fact the absence of wax and other obstructions has made them easier to detect.”
Conservancy biologists have also documented a cascade effect on the foxes’ offspring, since most young foxes get the ear mites from their parents.
“Prior to treatment in 2009, approximately 90 percent of all pups handled had ear mites, whereas by 2015, mites were detected in only 15 percent of new pups.”
King said, Genetics!!!
The studies pose new questions. For instance, the mite treatment certainly reduces the prevalence and severity of mite infection, as well as risk factors for tumor development, but what effect will it have on overall tumor and cancer rates for these foxes in the long term?
Also, ear mites infect other Channel Island foxes, but those foxes don’t develop ear canal tumors. So why are Santa Catalina Island foxes predisposed to these tumors and not other Channel Island foxes? Vickers and colleagues are preparing to research possible genetic reasons for this.
“Catalina foxes have an over-exuberant tissue reaction to the same stimuli–the mites–and that appears to lead to the tumors,” Vickers said. “That’s why we gravitate toward genetics in addition to other factors.”
The Santa Catalina Island fox is one of six subspecies native to the Channel Islands off the coast of Southern California. Its population declined dramatically in 1999 when a distemper epidemic decimated up to 90 percent of the population, prompting the federal endangered species listing for the roughly 150 foxes remaining. The population has since rebounded to an estimated 1,717 foxes.
Ear mites dwell in the ears of animals, and some mite species are specific to certain animals. If you have pets in your house and notice that they are scratching their ears often, they may have an infestation. Ear mites can infect one or both ears of your pet. This video will teach you how to remedy this situation and will discuss. . .whether or not ear mites are transmissible to humans.
Are You Dealing With a Mite Infestation?
Learn what species exist and how to identify them.
Understand how they spread.
Learn the symptoms of having ear mites.
Learn how ear mites are treated medically.
Discover potential home remedies for the problem.
Mites are characterized by their small size and their eight legs. The scientific name, Otodectes cynotis (the most common species of mite), describes the mite genus and species. Oto means “ear,” dectes means “biter,” and cynotis means “of the dog.” Otodectes cynotis translates to “ear biter of the dog,” which is also how these mites behave—they live under the surface of the skin.
Another mite species that can cause skin infections is called demodex. They infect areas of the head and the ears, however, they do not infect areas inside the ear canal like the Otodectes or Notoedres species.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btUuzxwKgAQ