Full text found here: http://www.lansingstatejournal.com/article/20120726/NEWS01/307260055/Potter-Park-Zoo-euthanizes-goats-after-devastating-disease?odyssey=tab|topnews|text|FRONTPAGE&gcheck=1&nclick_check=1 
LANSING — An infectious disease that afflicts hooved
 animals prompted the Potter Park Zoo to euthanize its goat herd in May,
 the zoo confirmed Thursday.
The pygmy 
goats contracted Johne’s Disease, which causes a gradual thickening of 
the lining of the intestine and eventually leads to death, the zoo said.
 The animals were put down to keep them from suffering and to prevent 
the disease from spreading to other zoo animals, it said.
“Once
 we discovered they were infected, we basically had to put them to sleep
 so they would not suffer,” said Tara Harrison, the zoo’s veterinarian 
and curator. “We caught it early enough that none of the other animals 
in the zoo were infected.”
The
 six goats were in the petting zoo exhibit and have since been replaced 
by seven baby goats that came from a farm free of Johne’s disease, 
Harrison said.
Johne’s Disease,
 or mycobaterium avium paratuberculosis (MAP), is hard to detect and 
afflicts cattle, deer, sheep, goats and other ruminants, according to 
information on a Michigan State University College of Veterinary 
Medicine Web page.
Animals typically contract the disease at a young age, but don’t show symptoms for several years.
MAP
 is common in goats and cattle and is present in 60 to 70 percent of the
 state’s goat herds, Harrison said. It can take up to three months to 
determine whether an animal is infected using the most reliable test for
 the disease, she said.
Harrison
 said the zoo had been managing the problem over the past year, testing 
each animal individually and euthanizing them when they tested positive.
 Toward the end, all of the remaining goats tested positive and were put
 down, she said.
“We
 don’t like to euthanize animals, but it was the most humane thing to 
do,” the vet said. “It was the best thing to do for the goats and the 
best thing to do for all of the animals here at the zoo.”
The
 zoo took extraordinary measures to prevent the disease from spreading 
to other animals, scorching the earth to kill bacteria, replacing the 
top three inches of soil and disinfecting the barn with bleach, she 
said.
Also, staff who care for the goats do not care for any of the other hooved animal species, she said.
The
 zoo’s other hooved residents include the critically endangered black 
rhino, Bactrian camel, eastern bongo and scimitar-horned oryx, along 
with llamas, donkeys and yaks.
The new goats are a pygmy breed and a cross of the pygmy and Nigerian Dwarf breeds, Harrison said.
“We fully intend to keep them here for their entire lives,” she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment