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Volume 23, Number 12—December 2017
Research Letter

Rabies and Distemper Outbreaks in Smallest Ethiopian Wolf Population

Author affiliations: University of Oxford, Oxford, UK (J. Marino, C. Sillero-Zubiri, E. Bedin); International Union for Conservation of Nature Species Survival Commission Canid Specialist Group, Oxford (C. Sillero-Zubiri); Ethiopian Public Health Institute, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (A. Deressa); Environmental, Forest, Wildlife Development and Protection Authority, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia (A. Bitewa); Ethiopian Wolf Conservation Programme, Bale Robe, Ethiopia (J. Marino); Ethiopian Wolf Conservation Programme, Bahir Dar (F. Lema, G. Rskay); Animal and Plant Health Agency, Weybridge, UK (A. Banyard, A.R. Fooks)

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Abstract

Widespread deaths recently devastated the smallest known population of Ethiopian wolves. Of 7 carcasses found, all 3 tested were positive for rabies. Two wolves were subsequently vaccinated for rabies; 1 of these later died from canine distemper. Only 2 of a known population of 13 wolves survived.

Canine diseases pose a growing threat to wildlife species of conservation concern worldwide. Although extensive oral vaccinations have eliminated rabies virus (RABV) from wild carnivore populations in some developed countries (1), elsewhere, the challenges to controlling diseases in endangered wildlife are many and persistent. Massive outbreaks of rabies and, more recently, canine distemper have repeatedly decimated populations of Ethiopian wolves (Canis simensis) in the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia, where more than half of a global population of ≈500 wolves live (2,3). Extensive efforts to control RABV in the reservoir population of sympatric domestic dogs have proved insufficient. Therefore, reactive vaccination of Ethiopian wolves, carried out in response to an outbreak in wolves, has been the primary mechanism to curtail mortality in the affected wolf populations in the Bale Mountains (4).

The fragile status of the Bale population highlights the conservation value of the other remaining, much smaller, wolf populations scattered throughout the highlands of Ethiopia. Models predict these small populations to be particularly vulnerable to disease outbreaks (5); however, no outbreaks had been detected outside Bale, either because they went unnoticed, because in small populations outbreaks die out before causing a major epizootic event, or both. We report consecutive rabies and canine distemper outbreaks among Ethiopian wolves in Delanta, in the Wollo highlands (6).

This group of wolves is the smallest extant wolf population; 13 wolves in 3 family packs lived in the remaining 20 km2 of Afroalpine habitat in 2015. The first wolf carcass was detected in late June 2016; by early September, 7 deaths had been confirmed. RABV infection was identified as the cause of death in all 3 of the carcasses tested, as well as in samples from 1 domestic dog concurrently found dead within wolf habitat (Table). A vaccination intervention was initiated in September 2016, when only 3 wolves were known to be alive; 1 adult male (>2 years of age) and 1 subadult female (1–2 years of age) were trapped (7) and parenterally inoculated with Nobivac Rabies (Merck Animal Health, Madison, NJ, USA) (4). In December 2016, the female wolf was found dead and tested positive for canine distemper virus (CDV) (Table); CDV was also detected in a dog carcass found concurrently in the vicinity of the wolf range. In late May, the vaccinated male was still alive and was observed until at least April 2017 with an unknown adult female.

Evidence indicates a first outbreak of rabies, overlapping or followed soon after by a canine distemper outbreak. Confirmation of disease in contemporarily recovered dog carcasses is consistent with a pattern of transmission from reservoir domestic dogs to their wild relatives (as observed in the Bale Mountains [8]), with disastrous consequences for the small Delanta population, which harbored <20 wolves before the epizootic events. Although the larger Bale wolf population has recovered from epizootic events in the past (2,9), smaller populations are expected to be less resilient, a factor exacerbated by their virtual isolation from other wolf populations. Modeling has predicted a high extinction risk if Ethiopian wolf populations are affected by consecutive epizootic events over a short period of time (5). The combined exacerbated effects of RABV and CDV infection were first described in 2010 in the Bale Mountains (3).

Although the loss of Afroalpine habitats is bound to determine the fate of Ethiopian wolf populations (2 extinctions were recorded in areas of a similar size to that of Delaware during 1999 and 2010) (2), incursions of infectious diseases can drive local extinctions. Preemptive vaccination, in combination with actions to protect the habitat of this specialized predator, could greatly reduce the risk of populations becoming extinct, even if a relatively low proportion of the wolves is successfully vaccinated (4). Recently, SAG2, an oral rabies vaccine, was successfully tested in Ethiopian wolves (10), and a CDV parenteral vaccination trial is ongoing, with positive preliminary results. We propose proactive vaccination of Ethiopian wolves across their distribution as an effective and urgently needed strategy to protect the species from extinction. This program should be part of an integrated disease control plan that also includes controlling disease in domestic dogs, limiting contact between dogs and wolves, and conducting policy and education interventions to reduce the size and roaming behavior of local dog populations (2).

Dr. Marino is a conservation ecologist with the University of Oxford’s Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU), Oxford, UK, and is science director of the Ethiopian Wolf Conservation Programme. She is interested in the ecology and conservation of threatened carnivores, and coordinates Ethiopian Wolf Conservation Programme monitoring efforts, looking at the demography of the rare and endangered Ethiopian wolf, interactions with free-ranging dogs, and the impact of viral diseases.

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Acknowledgments

We thank the Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Authority and Environment and Forest and Wildlife Protection and Development Authority (Amhara National Regional State) for support and permission to work in Delanta. We thank Delanta and Gubalaftu Waredas and Wolf Ambassadors, and Leigh Thorne and Daisy Jennings for excellent technical assistance.

The work was funded by the Born Free Foundation and the Wildlife Conservation Network. The work undertaken by Animal and Plant Health Agency is funded by a grant (SEV3500) from the UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Scottish and Welsh Governments.

The animal care and use protocols for the ethical handling of Ethiopian wolves were approved by the Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Authority and the University of Oxford’s Local Ethical Review Process (Zoology ERC; case no. ZERC040905) and adhere to the United Kingdom’s ASPA regulations (1986).

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References

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Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid2312.170893

Table of Contents – Volume 23, Number 12—December 2017

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Jorgelina Marino, Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, University of Oxford, The Recanati-Kaplan Centre, Tubney House, Tubney, Oxford OX13 5QL, UK

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Page created: November 16, 2017
Page updated: November 16, 2017
Page reviewed: November 16, 2017
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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