Abstract

Anthrax is a bacterial disease caused by Bacillus anthracis that affects wildlife, livestock and also humans in different parts of the world. It is endemic in some parts of Africa, including Namibia, with species differing in their susceptibility to the disease. Carnivores are typically less susceptible to anthrax than herbivores. Most carnivore species survive infection and have high seroprevalence against anthrax, whereas most herbivore species have low seroprevalence and typically die quickly when infected. Several reports have shown that cheetahs, unlike most other large carnivores, are susceptible to anthrax leading to a sudden death. This finding was suggested to be linked to the low genetic variability of cheetahs which might reduce an adequate immune response and thus explain such a high susceptibility to the disease. Here, we report an incidence of three free-ranging cheetahs that died within 24 h after feeding on a mountain zebra that tested positive for anthrax in the Namib Desert. We were able to reconstruct this incidence with the data recorded in the GPS (Global Positioning System) collar worn by one of the cheetahs and retrieved in the field. It is very likely that the cheetahs died from anthrax, although Bacillus anthracis could not be isolated from tissue and soil samples by bacterial culturing. The mountain zebra is the first described case of a wild animal that tested positive for anthrax in this arid area in southwestern of Namibia. We discuss the negative laboratory results of the cheetahs in the light of new insights of their immune system and its potential to mount a response against this bacteria.

Highlights

  • Anthrax is an infectious zoonotic disease caused by the rod-shaped gram-positive bacteria Bacillus anthracis

  • Our study is the first report on an anthrax case in the Naukluft National Park (NKNP) and the second case in the Namib Desert

  • The first case in the Namib Desert was on the 26th of November 2008, when the Central Veterinary Laboratory (CVL) confirmed two sheep to have died from anthrax on a farm bordering to the NKNP and 40 km east of the mountain zebra carcass in our study

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Summary

Introduction

Anthrax is an infectious zoonotic disease caused by the rod-shaped gram-positive bacteria Bacillus anthracis. It affects wildlife, livestock and humans world-wide, with southern and eastern Africa being affected on a regular basis with outbreaks [1, 2]. Uganda and Serengeti NP in Tanzania [1,2,3,4]. In the Ngogongoro Crater in Tanzania, seroprevalence in wildebeest was 4% and of buffalo 14%, whereas in the Serengeti NP seroprevalence was higher with wildebeest having 19% and buffalo 46% seroprevalence [2, 6]. The highly susceptible zebra had a seroprevalence of 0% in all three study sites [2, 6], a subsequent study in the Etosha NP demonstrated that zebras do survive sublethal infections and mount adaptive immunity, this protection decreases rapidly if not boosted regularly with further sublethal infections [5]

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