Animals (Aug 2022)

Description of a Sarcoptic Mange Outbreak in Alpine Chamois Using an Enhanced Surveillance Approach

  • Federica Obber,
  • Roberto Celva,
  • Martina Libanora,
  • Graziana Da Rold,
  • Debora Dellamaria,
  • Piergiovanni Partel,
  • Enrico Ferraro,
  • Maria Santa Calabrese,
  • Lia Morpurgo,
  • Simone Roberto Rolando Pisano,
  • Carlo Vittorio Citterio,
  • Rudi Cassini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12162077
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 16
p. 2077

Abstract

Read online

Since 1995, the Alpine chamois (Rupicapra r. rupicapra) population of the Dolomites has been affected by sarcoptic mange with considerable management concerns. In this study, 15 years (2006–2020) of passive surveillance and demographic data were analyzed in order to describe a mange outbreak. Furthermore, an enhanced passive surveillance protocol was implemented in order to evaluate the efficiency of ordinary vs. enhanced surveillance protocol in identifying dead chamois in the field and in reaching a correct diagnosis. Our results confirm the role of mange as a determining factor for chamois mortality, while stressing the importance of a wider view on the factors affecting population dynamics. The enhanced passive surveillance protocol increased the probability of carcass retrieval and identification of the cause of death; however, its adoption may be too costly if applied for long periods on a wide scale. Passive surveillance, in both ordinary and enhanced surveillance protocol, should encompass the use of other strategies in the future to study the eco-epidemiology of the disease in wild Caprinae.

Keywords