학술논문

NONINVASIVE SAMPLING FOR DETECTION OF ELEPHANT ENDOTHELIOTROPIC HERPESVIRUS AND GENOMIC DNA IN ASIAN (ELEPHAS MAXIMUS) AND AFRICAN (LOXODONTA AFRICANA) ELEPHANTS
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine. 51(2)
Subject
Veterinary Sciences
Agricultural
Veterinary and Food Sciences
Zoology
Biological Sciences
Life on Land
Animal Feed
Animals
Animals
Zoo
Betaherpesvirinae
Blood Specimen Collection
Elephants
Feces
Female
Food Microbiology
Herpesviridae Infections
Ireland
Male
Specimen Handling
Elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus
elephant gamma herpesvirus-1
Elephas maximus
feces
Loxodonta africana
noninvasive
elephant γ herpesvirus-1
Veterinary sciences
Language
Abstract
Elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus (EEHV) hemorrhagic disease (EEHV-HD) threatens Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) population sustainability in North America. Clusters of cases have also been reported in African elephants (Loxodonta africana). Risk to range country elephant populations is unknown. Currently, EEHV detection depends upon sampling elephants trained for invasive blood and trunk wash collection. To evaluate noninvasive sample collection options, paired invasively collected (blood, trunk wash and oral swabs), and noninvasively collected (chewed plant and fecal) samples were compared over 6 wk from 9 Asian elephants and 12 African elephants. EEHV shedding was detected simultaneously in a paired trunk wash and fecal sample from one African elephant. Elephant γ herpesvirus-1 shedding was identified in six chewed plant samples collected from four Asian elephants. Noninvasively collected samples can be used to detect elephant herpesvirus shedding. Longer sampling periods are needed to evaluate the clinical usefulness of noninvasive sampling for EEHV detection.