Abstract

Koalas are rescued from the wild often with incidence of burns from bushfire, injury from animal attacks, vehicle collision, and diseases. Exposure to environmental stressors (trauma and disease) could generate physiological stress and potentially impact the outcomes of clinical management intervention and rehabilitation of rescued wild koalas. It is important to quantify the stress physiology of wild koalas upon registering into clinical care. This study demonstrates the first report of physiological stress assessment in rescued wild koalas (n = 22) to determine the potential influences of habitat-specific demographics, stressor category, and clinical diagnosis. Fecal samples were collected from the koalas at rescue and routinely during hospitalization to provide a longitudinal assessment of the koala's stress response throughout clinical care. Fecal glucocorticoid metabolites (FCM) enzyme-immunoassay was used to index physiological stress non-invasively. Koalas were admitted with exposure to various categories of environmental trauma such as vehicle collision, dog attack, burns from forest fire (this also related to conditions such as copious drinking and flat demeanor), and other injury. The main disease diagnosed was chlamydial infections. In terms of environmental interactions, it was found that habitat-specific demographics, location where the rescued koala was found, especially the rural-urban fringe, influenced FCM levels. Furthermore, there was significant interaction between location, stressor category, and clinical diagnosis for mean FCM levels. However, these factors were not predictive of the clinical outcome (euthanized or released). Overall, the results provide invaluable insights into how wild koalas respond physiologically to environmental trauma and disease and how methods of care, husbandry, and treatment can be used to further reduce the impacts of stress with the ultimate aim of increasing the rehabilitation and future release of rescued koalas to revive the declining mainland populations.

Highlights

  • Global biodiversity is in rapid decline with an increase in human use of Earth’s natural resources [1]

  • GLMM Analysis of Variance results showed that mean Fecal glucocorticoid metabolites (FCM) levels were significantly different between individual koalas (F = 26.33, df = 11, 220; p < 0.001)

  • This study has provided new knowledge on the physiological stress responses of rescued wild koalas in relation to their habitat demographics, stressor category, and clinical intervention

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Summary

Introduction

Global biodiversity is in rapid decline with an increase in human use of Earth’s natural resources [1]. There are a multitude of both environmental factors and species attributes being recognized as causations of this species decline [3] These are inclusive of anthropogenic induced environmental changes [4], shelter and foraging habitat, regional productivity, fecundity, longevity and phylogeny [3]. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) lists 56 Australian land mammals as threatened and an additional 52 as near-threatened [1]. One these threatened species is the koala (Phascolarctos cinereus), being recognized as threatened under both Commonwealth and State legislation [5]

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