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1 October 2013 CLINICAL, CULTURE, SEROLOGY, AND HISTOPATHOLOGY OUTCOMES OF BIGHORN SHEEP EXPERIMENTALLY INFECTED WITH BRUCELLA OVIS
Matt McCollum, Jack Rhyan, Sarah Coburn, Darla Ewalt, Carrie Lahr, Pauline Nol, Thomas Keefe, Cleon Kimberling, Mo Salman
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Abstract

Disease caused by Brucella ovis has not been previously reported in bighorn sheep (BHS; Ovis canadensis canadensis). Antibodies to B. ovis, however, are occasionally detected in free-ranging BHS, and this has been a concern for managers involved in translocation programs. To investigate the pathogenesis of B. ovis infection in this species, 20 BHS (10 male, 10 female) were inoculated intraconjunctivally (IC) with 5.4×108 colony forming units (cfu) B. ovis. Six BHS (three male, three female) received 1 mL phosphate-buffered saline IC and served as in-contact control animals, and eight BHS (one male, seven female) received 1 mL phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) IC and served as noncontact controls. In addition, 14 domestic sheep (Ovis aries, nine male, five female) were inoculated IC with 5.4×108 cfu B. ovis (positive controls), and five domestic sheep (three male, two female) received 1 mL PBS IC (contact controls). All domestic sheep were housed separately from BHS. Bighorn sheep experimentally infected with B. ovis became antibody and culture positive and developed clinical signs of B. ovis infection including abortion and epididymal and testicular swelling. Lesions in BHS were consistent with, and in some cases more severe, than those observed in domestic sheep. Antibodies against B. ovis were detected within 4 wk postinoculation and remained positive until the end of the study. These findings have important implications for BHS management.

Wildlife Disease Association 2013
Matt McCollum, Jack Rhyan, Sarah Coburn, Darla Ewalt, Carrie Lahr, Pauline Nol, Thomas Keefe, Cleon Kimberling, and Mo Salman "CLINICAL, CULTURE, SEROLOGY, AND HISTOPATHOLOGY OUTCOMES OF BIGHORN SHEEP EXPERIMENTALLY INFECTED WITH BRUCELLA OVIS," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 49(4), 900-910, (1 October 2013). https://doi.org/10.7589/2012-02-061
Received: 17 February 2012; Accepted: 1 March 2013; Published: 1 October 2013
KEYWORDS
Abortion
Bighorn Sheep
Brucella ovis
brucellosis
epididymitis
orchitis
Ovis canadensis
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