FATAL PNEUMONIA OF BIGHORN SHEEP FOLLOWING ASSOCIATION WITH DOMESTIC SHEEP
- 1 April 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wildlife Disease Association in Journal of Wildlife Diseases
- Vol. 18 (2) , 163-168
- https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-18.2.163
Abstract
During 1979-1980 acute fibrinopurulent bronchopneumonia resulted in high mortality or total loss of herds of bighorn sheep (O. canadensis) in California and Washington (USA). Contact with domestic sheep occurred shortly before the onset of disease in each case. Circumstantial evidence indicated that the apparently healthy domestic sheep transmitted pathogenic bacteria to the bighorns, resulting in mortality. Pasteurella multocida and Corynebacterium pyogenes were isolated from pulmonary tissue of dead bighorns. The presence of domestic sheep may have been an important stress which initiated or compounded the disease.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- PSOROPTIC SCABIES IN BIGHORN SHEEP (Ovia canadensis mexicana) IN NEW MEXICOJournal of Wildlife Diseases, 1980
- ISOLATION OF A CHLAMYDIAL AGENT FROM ROCKY MOUNTAIN BIGHORN SHEEPJournal of Wildlife Diseases, 1979