Publications by authors named "Kutz S"

The caribou ( sspp.) is a keystone wildlife species in northern ecosystems that plays a central role in the culture, spirituality and food security of Indigenous People. The Arctic is currently experiencing an unprecedented rate of climate change, including warming temperatures and altered patterns of precipitation.

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In conservation strategies, getting precise and repeatable information on the species' diet and health without relying on invasive or laborious methods is challenging. Here, we developed an efficient and non-invasive workflow for the sequencing and analysis of four taxonomic markers from fecal DNA to characterize the gut microbiota, parasites, and plants and lichens composing the winter diet of caribou (Rangifer tarandus), Canada's most iconic endangered species. Sequencing of the 18S rRNA gene of eukaryotes from seven locations in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, Canada, allowed for the detection of five genera of parasites in caribou feces (including Nematodirella and Parelaphostrongylus) with variable frequency of occurrence depending on sampling location and sex.

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Onchocerca is an important genus of vector-borne filarial nematodes that infect both humans and animals worldwide. Many Onchocerca spp., most of medical and veterinary health relevance, are the focus of a variety of diagnostic and molecular research.

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Many Indigenous communities in Canada lack access to veterinary services due to geography, affordability, and acceptability. These barriers negatively affect the health of animals, communities, and human-animal relationships. Canadian veterinary colleges offer veterinary services to Indigenous communities through fourth-year veterinary student rotations.

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Many health care programs in medicine, nursing, social work, and physiotherapy include practicum rotations near the end of students' studies. Increasingly, veterinary education programs also offer community-based rotations in underserved or remote communities. While these opportunities in veterinary medicine provide many learning benefits, they can also be stressful if the students do not feel adequately supported.

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  • Polar bears' life is closely linked to sea ice and their prey in the Arctic, which is changing due to climate warming and leading to more diseases in these bears.
  • A study of 180 Beaufort Sea polar bears found that 27.2% tested positive for the pathogen Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae, which is known to infect both domestic and wild animals.
  • Factors like increased predation on ringed seals and negative winter Arctic Oscillation years were associated with higher exposure to this pathogen, suggesting that changes in the seal population affect polar bears' health.
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  • Parasites have a negative impact on the health and reproductive success of muskoxen in the Arctic, particularly when combined with other stressors like limited food availability.
  • A study of 141 muskoxen revealed that higher parasite loads correlated with poorer body condition and lower female reproductive rates, indicating that energy may be diverted from fighting parasites to reproduction.
  • Severe weather events, like icing, intensified the effects of parasitism by restricting food access, leading to high mortality rates in the muskoxen population and highlighting the importance of understanding these ecological interactions.
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Background: Muskoxen are important ecosystem components and provide food, economic opportunities, and cultural well-being for Indigenous communities in the Canadian Arctic. Between 2010 and 2021, Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae was isolated from carcasses of muskoxen, caribou, a seal, and an Arctic fox during multiple large scale mortality events in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. A single strain ('Arctic clone') of E.

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Males and females in sexually dimorphic species show differences in their physiology and behaviour due to differences in energetic investment into reproduction and soma. This means that the two sexes may show different patterns of parasitism at different times of the year. In this study, we evaluate the abundance of fecal eggs and larvae of 5 parasite types (Strongyles, spp.

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Brucellosis is an important zoonotic disease affecting animals and subsistence harvesters in the circumarctic. We investigated recent trends (2015-2022) of brucellosis seropositivity in caribou () and muskoxen () in the Central Canadian Arctic by using data from community-based wildlife health surveillance programs. The overall sample prevalence of a antibodies was 10.

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Age estimation is crucial for investigating animal populations in the past and present. Visual examination of tooth wear and eruption is one of the most common ageing methods in zooarchaeology, wildlife management, palaeontology, and veterinary research. Such approaches are particularly advantageous because they are non-destructive, can be completed using photographs, and do not require specialized training.

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Treponema spp. are associated with infectious lameness in livestock and wild ruminants. While extensive research has been conducted on cattle, investigations in wild ruminants are scarce.

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  • - Orf virus, linked to severe skin lesions in muskoxen and contributing to population declines, was studied in Canadian Arctic muskoxen to assess its genetic diversity and prevalence alongside herpesvirus.
  • - Tissue samples from 60 muskoxen, collected between 2015 and 2017, revealed 11 animals with lesions consistent with orf virus infection, while 33 showed evidence of muskox rhadinovirus 1, indicating a high rate of co-infection.
  • - Phylogenetic analysis showed a unique strain of orf virus endemic to muskoxen in the region, but no significant histological evidence of disease caused by herpesvirus was found, suggesting it may remain subclinical in affected animals. *
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  • Segmental analysis of hair can track biomarkers over extended periods, but needs a known growth rate or chronological marker for accuracy.
  • A study on captive muskoxen in Alaska measured guard hair growth rates to evaluate if a single growth rate applies to all muskox populations.
  • Results showed varying growth rates based on the time period of hair growth, indicating that a universal growth rate for muskoxen cannot be consistently applied, as captive muskoxen grew hair significantly faster than their free-ranging counterparts.
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Objective: Subsidized dog care and population management programs (DPM) are often implemented for dog population control where for-profit veterinary care is inaccessible. However, impacts of such programs are rarely assessed. The goal of this project was to determine if and how previously collected intake data from ongoing high-volume spay-neuter clinics could be used to measure impacts of such DPM programs.

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Assessing wildlife health in remote regions requires a multi-faceted approach, which commonly involves convenient samplings and the need of identifying and targeting relevant and informative indicators. We applied a novel wildlife health framework and critically assessed the value of different indicators for understanding the health status and trends of an endangered tundra caribou population. Samples and data from the Dolphin and Union caribou herd were obtained between 2015 and 2021, from community-based surveillance programs and from captured animals.

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Across a species' range, populations are exposed to their local thermal environments, which on an evolutionary scale, may cause adaptative differences among populations. Helminths often have broad geographic ranges and temperature-sensitive life stages but little is known about whether and how local thermal adaptation can influence their response to climate change. We studied the thermal responses of the free-living stages of Marshallagia marshalli, a parasitic nematode of wild ungulates, along a latitudinal gradient.

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Microbiome diversity and diet composition concomitantly influence species health, fitness, immunity, and digestion. In environments where diet varies spatially and temporally, microbiome plasticity may promote rapid host adaptation to available resources. For northern ungulates in particular, metabarcoding of noninvasively collected fecal pellets presents unprecedented insights into their diverse ecological requirements and niches by clarifying the interrelationships of microbiomes, key to deriving nutrients, in context of altered forage availability in changing climates.

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Migratory caribou ( sspp.) is an ecotype of conservation concern that is experiencing increased cumulative stressors associated with rapid climate change and development in Arctic Canada. Increasingly, hair cortisol concentrations (HCCs) are being used to monitor seasonal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity of ungulate populations; yet, the effect of key covariates for caribou (sex, season, sampling source, body location) are largely unknown.

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Parasites can impact wildlife populations through their effects on host fitness and survival. The life history strategies of a parasite species can dictate the mechanisms and timing through which it influences the host. However, unravelling this species-specific effect is difficult as parasites generally occur as part of a broader community of co-infecting parasites.

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Article Synopsis
  • In 2016, researchers isolated the first orf virus from muskoxen in Canada, revealing a nearly identical genetic sequence across multiple samples, indicating a close relationship with orf viruses found in sheep and goats.
  • Deep sequencing results showed a large contiguous genomic sequence of 131,759 bp and highlighted potential recombination events in the virus's virulence factors.
  • Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the B2L gene sequences of the orf virus in muskoxen do not align with the geographic distribution, suggesting the need for more comprehensive studies on orf viruses in North American wildlife.
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Rationale: Analysis of stable isotopes in tissue and excreta may provide information about animal diets and their nutritional state. As body condition may have a major influence on reproduction, linking stable isotope values to animal demographic rates may help unravel the drivers behind animal population dynamics.

Methods: We performed sequential analysis of δ N values in guard hair from 21 muskoxen (Ovibos moschatus) from Zackenberg in high arctic Greenland.

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Ligand binding of membrane proteins triggers many important cellular signaling events by the lateral aggregation of ligand-bound and other membrane proteins in the plane of the plasma membrane. This local clustering can lead to the co-enrichment of molecules that create an intracellular signal or bring sufficient amounts of activity together to shift an existing equilibrium towards the execution of a signaling event. In this way, clustering can serve as a cellular switch.

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Climate change is affecting Arctic ecosystems, including parasites. Predicting outcomes for host-parasite systems is challenging due to the complexity of multi-species interactions and the numerous, interacting pathways by which climate change can alter dynamics. Increasing temperatures may lead to faster development of free-living parasite stages but also higher mortality.

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