Gorillas chimps threatened by human disease
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Gorillas and chimps are threatened by human disease
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In a bid to save wild apes from extinction, people may
be unwittingly infecting them with potentially deadly diseases, new research
shows.
Humans and great apes are closely related, creating the potential for
diseases to jump between them.
Isolated incidents have been documented of apes and monkeys contracting
measles, pneumonia, and influenza from people, as well as a range of other
bacteria, viruses and parasites.
But the problem may be greater than even that, as highlighted by five
recently published academic studies.
Your close cousins
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The close contact between animals and humans in research
centres and sanctuaries is facilitating the spread of pathogens to apes, say
scientists.
A newly published study by researchers in Japan examined blood serum from 14
captive chimpanzees in Japanese primate research institutes.
Takanori Kooriyama of the Rakuno Gakuen University in Ebetsu, and colleagues
across Japan, tested for antibodies against 62 human pathogens.
The chimps had antibodies against 29 of these pathogens, showing they had
been exposed to them.
"Captive chimpanzees are highly susceptible to human pathogens," the
researchers write in the journal Primates.
Bad bugs
Earlier this month, Frieder Schaumberg of the Institute of Medical
Microbiology in Munster, Germany, and colleagues in Germany, the US and Uganda,
published a revealing study in the American Journal of Primatology.
They found a high prevalence of drug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
bacteria in sanctuary chimpanzees in Zambia and Uganda.
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Helping hand or health risk?
These bacteria were likely passed to the apes by the veterinarians and staff
caring for them.
The bugs are difficult to eradicate and can cause skin and tissue infections
as well as severe bouts of pneumonia and septicaemia.
The study shows specifically that human pathogens can be passed to apes that
are destined for release in the wild.
Researchers say that plans to reintroduce apes into the wild need to be
re-evaluated to prevent drug-resistant diseases being spread through populations
of rare animals.
Knowing the risks
Steve Unwin of the Animal Health Centre at Chester Zoo, UK and colleagues in
the UK and US, agree that the development is "worrying".
But in the same issue of the journal, they argue that it is too soon to
consider stopping reintroductions.
Past ills
- Humans, possibly ecotourists, are thought to have passed the skin disease
scabies and intestinal worms to gorillas living in Biwindi National Park,
Uganda
- Human metapneumovirus is suspected to have killed mountain gorillas in
Rwanda, and been responsible for chimpanzee die offs in Tai National Park in
Cote D'Ivoire.
The problem has been known for a while, they say, and
the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has developed a
set of guidelines governing the release of animals and rare species back into
the wild.
These guidelines recommend screening animals for health issues prior to their
release and potentially placing them in quarantine.
By testing for human-borne diseases, and preventing the release of infected
animals, the problem may be averted, they say.
Two researchers, Charles Nunn of Harvard University, Massachusetts, US and
Brian Hare of Duke University, North Carolina, US, who are experts in the
evolutionary biology of humans and other apes, also comment in the same
journal.
They recommend a number of areas for future research.
For example, to better understand the risks, we need to know more about how
antibiotic-strains of bacteria spread between individual apes, and whether they
actually cause any greater sickness or death in these animals.
It may be that other pathogens we are unaware of can spread between humans
and apes too. And young animals are more prone to infection, as they spend more
time in physical contact with sanctuary workers.
Scratched and bitten
Solving the problem is difficult, in part because passing diseases to
primates is a practical as well as an ethical issue.
As Prof Nunn and Prof Hare point out in their paper, the release of apes back
into the wild remains an art form.
Gorilla marvels
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Sanctuary managers face a range of political, time and
financial pressures that limit their ability to take in new apes, care for them,
and then release them.
Between 2000 and 2006, for example, the chimp population living at Pan
African Sanctuary Alliance sanctuaries grew 15% a year, driven by the adoption
of an average of 56 new apes each year - animals that had been orphaned by the
bushmeat trade.
Reintroducing these animals is important, argue Unwin and colleagues.
Not only does it help rehabilitate the lives of individual apes, and boost
numbers of rare species in the wild, but the process can help educate local
people about the importance of conservation.
Diseases can spread of course from primates to people: the group of HIV
viruses that cause AIDS has jumped from monkeys and chimpanzees into people,
seeding a global human health crisis. Ebola meanwhile is harboured by
gorillas.
A study published late last year by George Engel and Lisa-Jones Engel of the
University of Washington, Seattle, US, in the American Journal of Primatology,
presented the results of a survey of 116 primatologists who had worked closely
with non-human primate species.
Of those surveyed, almost 60% said they had been scratched by a primate and
40% had been bitten, highlighting the risk of disease transmission.
But our ability to pass novel diseases back into ape and monkey species is
less well known.
Monkey malaise
- A study presented at the 35th Meeting of the American Society of
Primatologists in Sacremento, California, US in June, showed that macaques had
antibodies to both human and avian influenza viruses in areas where high
densities of people live.
- That reveals the macaques had been exposed to the viruses and may be
susceptible to them.
- Drs Engle and Engle sampled blood serum from more than 200 macaques at sites
in Singapore, Bangladesh, Gibraltar, Cambodia and Indonesia.
Wild apes are also exposed to human pathogens through a
number of different routes, including when apes raid crops, when tourists
encounter apes in their natural habitat and when workers go into forests to
exploit resources, such as mining, logging and the hunting of bushmeat.
At the heart of the issue is a painful dilemma. Contact between humans and
apes often occurs because conservationists and researchers have to get close to
the apes to save them.
Scientists themselves can pass diseases to the apes they study.
In recent years, primatologists have debated the extent to which they might
be threatening the wild apes they research, and what to do about it.
Many research groups now wear face masks when close to their subjects, to
avoid transmitting airborne diseases.
Disinfecting boots before heading into the forest, and observing apes from
predetermined safe distances, are other safeguards, ones that many feel
ecotourists should also follow.
For many primatologists, it seems, they are damned if they do and damned if
they don't.
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Populations of great apes; gorilla, chimp and orang-utan
species, and the small apes, or gibbons, are dwindling around the world, and
everything possible must be done to save them, they say.
Researchers must study the animals in the wild to understand them, and find
better ways to protect them.
The benefits of such research far outweighs the costs, many experts
argue.
As well as providing valuable information about the size and behaviour of
great ape populations, the presence of researchers can deter poachers, encourage
politicians to take an interest in primate conservation and directly save or
protect the lives of many rare apes.
Sanctuaries take in apes as a last resort, and their reintroduction is
considered to be an important conservation tool.
However, as the latest research shows, the difficult part is finding ways to
save these closest relatives of ours, without unwittingly harming them in the
process.
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