Abstract

Simple SummaryIll or injured wildlife species are been rescued, treated and or rehabilitated usually at the wildlife rescued centers, zoos clinic facilities and or wildlife conservation centers. The false gharial also known as Malayan gharial is a crocodile species native to Peninsular Malaysia, Borneo and Indonesia with extirpation in Singapore, Vietnam and Thailand. The false gharial is facing a threat of extinction due to habitat destruction and hunting Policies were implemented to conserve this species through the establishment of Ex-Situ Conservation centers, as such to maintain the health and welfare status of this species while in captivity, understanding its normal Haematology and serum biochemistry values becomes necessary to save the false gharial from extinction. The involvement of veterinary medicine in wildlife research has played an important role in understanding the health status of various wildlife species. Health status is a very important aspect of species conservation. However, it requires a widely employed knowledge of veterinary clinical pathology, as a diagnostic tool in diagnosing the various disease conditions of wildlife species. Notwithstanding, a gap exists in the literature about the clinical pathology of the false gharial, due to the lack of normal reference values for hematological and serum biochemical analysis. The present study investigated the normal blood profile of 10 healthy false gharials, from two different zoos, and wildlife conservation centers located in three different states of Peninsular Malaysia. Blood samples were collected from the lateral caudal vein and divided into a vacutainer without anticoagulant for biochemical analysis, and a lithium heparin vacutainer (containing sodium heparin) for hematological studies. The results of the study indicated that the false gharial has a smaller erythrocyte dimension compared to other crocodilian species. At the same time the study revealed that the false gharial in a natural captive pond showed more leukocytes than false gharial kept in zoos, hence, habitat and environmental factors significantly affect hematological values. The biochemistry values also showed differences between the false gharial in different environmental conditions. Total protein, albumin (Alb), globulin (Glob), and Alb: Glob ratio were higher in false gharials kept in wildlife conservation centers than in false gharials kept in zoos. The values obtained in this study provide baseline data of hematological and serum biochemical values of the false gharial for future research and routine clinical diagnosis.

Highlights

  • The false gharial (Tomistoma schlegelii) is a freshwater crocodilian with a distinctively narrow and long snout, and endemic to Indonesia and Malaysia [1,2]

  • Even though the blood cells of all crocodilian species are nucleated, with oval erythrocytes containing round to oval nuclei, and which are centrally located, in this study we reported differences in the erythrocyte morphology of false gharial, where it was observed that false gharials have smaller erythrocyte dimensions of 15.9 μm length and 7.6 μm width, compared to 23.0 μm length and 14.3 μm width in Alligator mississippiensis [18], and Caiman

  • Our study revealed that the hematological values, showing the number of erythrocytes (0.52 × 1012 /L), leukocytes (74.50 × 1012 /L), and hemoglobin (83.20 g/L), in false gharials kept in PERHILITAN Wildlife Conservation Centre with a semi-wild environment, had a higher mean than the false gharials kept in Zoos (0.39 × 1012 /L, 6.40 × 1012 /L, and 69.52 g/L) on a concrete pond

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Summary

Introduction

The false gharial (Tomistoma schlegelii) is a freshwater crocodilian with a distinctively narrow and long snout, and endemic to Indonesia and Malaysia [1,2]. False gharial distribution is limited to Indonesia (Kalimantan, West Java, and East Sumatra), Malaysia (Peninsular Malaysia, Sarawak), and Brunei, with no definitive population estimate for the false gharial [3]. These species were reported to be extinct in Thailand where the last sightings were made in 1970 [3]. Research about the false gharial, in both Malaysia and Indonesia, has focused on the census of false gharial in its natural habitats and other issues related to the conservation of its habitats [1,2,3,4,5,6].

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