AI Article Synopsis

  • Ophidiomycosis, caused by a specific fungus, poses challenges for studying its transmission and effects in wild snakes, prompting the need for a reliable experimental model.
  • The study developed a model using subcutaneous injection of fungus in red cornsnakes, leading to significant health issues and high mortality rates among inoculated snakes.
  • Findings suggest possible contact transmission during brumation and provide insights into the disease's pathology, making this model valuable for future research on snake fungal disease.

Article Abstract

Ophidiomycosis (snake fungal disease) is caused by the fungus . As ophidiomycosis is difficult to study in free-ranging snakes, a reliable experimental model is needed to investigate transmission, pathogenesis, morbidity, and mortality, and the effects of brumation and temperature on disease development. Our objective was to develop such a model via subcutaneous injection of conidia in red cornsnakes (). The model was used to evaluate transmission and the effects of brumation and temperature in co-housed inoculated and noninoculated snakes. All 23 inoculated snakes developed lesions consistent with ophidiomycosis, including heterophilic and granulomatous dermatitis, cellulitis, and myositis, and embolic fungal granulomas throughout the liver and the coelomic connective tissue in 21/23 (91%). In the inoculated snakes, 21% of skin swabs, 37% of exuvia, and all liver samples tested positive by qPCR (quantitative polymerase chain reaction) for . A post brumation skin swab from 1/12 noninoculated snakes that brumated in contact with inoculated snakes tested positive by qPCR, suggesting possible contact transmission. That snake had microscopic skin lesions consistent with ophidiomycosis, but no visible fungal elements. Of the 23 inoculated snakes, 20 (87%) died over the 70-day experiment, with ophidiomycosis considered the primary cause of death; 12 (52%) of the inoculated snakes died during brumation. Overall, this experimental model of ophidiomycosis reproduced skin lesions analogous to those of many natural cases, and internal lesions similar to the most severe natural cases. The study provides tentative experimental evidence for horizontal transmission in brumation, and offers a tool for future studies of this widespread snake disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0300985820953423DOI Listing

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