The Citizen (Gauteng)

Testing jumbos in KNP

RESEARCH: ONE ELEPHANT IN KRUGER PARK FOUND WITH HUMAN TB

- Reitumetse Makwea – reitumetse­m@citizen.co.za

Purpose to establish if infection is spreading and may cause future crisis.

Although there is no evidence that elephant infections and deaths from tuberculos­is (TB) which have been reported worldwide are currently creating a crisis in Kruger National Park (KNP), experts are continuing blood sample testing to screen the larger part of the elephant population.

Following a sample extraction and testing earlier this year, KNP’s Veterinary Wildlife Services senior veterinary manager Dr Peter Buss and his team conducted another sample testing due to concerns that elephants in the park were still at risk of human-borne TB, after one was killed by the disease in 2016.

Buss said the ongoing research programme to test at least half the elephants in the park was crucial to determine whether or not the human TB which was found in one of the elephants previously was a big problem or if they could rule out the possibilit­y of a crisis in the future.

“We have a huge population of elephants, about 30 000 elephants.

“We have this ongoing programme to get a big enough sample so that hopefully we can have confidence to say that it is an issue or it isn’t,” he said.

“But the results to date suggest that it isn’t, because we haven’t found any other elephants with TB.”

Buss also said that following a study conducted by Stellenbos­ch University’s Animal Tuberculos­is Research Group, South African National Parks and the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance in the US tested samples from 437 rhinos collected from 2016 to 2020 in KNP and they would also extend the research to other animals in the future.

The largest study conducted on a free-ranging population of rhinos revealed an estimated prevalence of M.bovis infection of 15.4% in black and white rhino population­s in the park.

Buss also said a lot of work to get baseline informatio­n and data on what was going on with TB in the park was now under way. meant that in the future they could start reflecting and conclude that the situation was deteriorat­ing, was stable, or the disease had disappeare­d.

“The effects of the disease is not like Covid or HIV, where you see the results almost immediatel­y, it can take decades for it actually to express itself completely,” Buss added.

“We know certain species are getting the disease and certain individual­s get sick. “But what we’re not sure about at this point is how’s that going to influence the population of these animals?

“Will it affect our buffalo population, our lion population and so forth.”

Kruger National Park veterinary technologi­st Tebogo Manamela said apart from TB there were many other bacterial diseases found in the park.

These included brucellosi­s, anthrax and parasitic diseases from parasites and ticks as well as viral diseases.

South African research chair in animal tuberculos­is at Stellenbos­ch University professor Michelle Miller previously said they were hoping to get more informatio­n to help them better understand how the animals were infected, and how it would impact on them in the long term.

“We didn’t think that elephants were necessaril­y affected by tuberculos­is, such as buffalo and lions are, but since that time we have developed a testing programme to look for the bacteria in respirator­y secretions,” Miller said.

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Pictures: Supplied

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