Sunday Territorian

Deadly dog disease rife

- ALICIA PERERA

NT vets are raising the alarm over a fatal canine disease that they say has killed thousands of dogs in the Territory in the past year and could kill many more if it continues to spread at its current rate.

Ehrlichios­is, a disease caused by bacteria spread by the common brown tick, has become establishe­d in the NT, WA and SA over the past year.

NT vets are raising the alarm over a fatal canine disease that they say has killed thousands of dogs in the Territory in the past year and could kill many more if it continues to spread at its current rate.

Ehrlichios­is, a disease caused by bacteria spread by the common brown tick, has become establishe­d in the NT, WA and SA since it was first detected in Australia in Kununurra in May 2020, and there have also been suspected cases in Queensland.

Vets say the disease has now become “endemic” in the NT and is killing dogs across the Territory at an alarming rate, especially in the past few months.

Outback and Airborne Veterinary Services vet Campbell Costello, who has recently worked in East Arnhem and central parts of the NT, said ehrlichios­is case numbers had “exploded” in the Territory in the past 12 months with devastatin­g consequenc­es. “At the moment, 80 per cent of the dogs I see (with the disease) are dying,” he said. “There must have been thousands, even tens of thousands, of dog deaths. It only takes up to an hour for dogs to get infected, and death can happen in 24 hours or less.

“And it’s affecting dogs of all kinds, including ones from big capital cities.”

He said with no vaccine available, and some dogs prone to relapsing after receiving antibiotic treatment, the best way owners could protect their dogs was by using tick repellants and tick prevention collars and chews.

NT Veterinary Services senior vet Alex Burleigh said he had seen hundreds of ehrlichios­is cases across his clinics in Katherine, Alice Springs and a number of remote communitie­s in the past year. “I’ve never seen a disease this devastatin­g and that spreads so rapidly,” he said. “We do have other tick diseases here (in the NT), and they sometimes do kill dogs, but we haven’t had anything nearly as bad as what this one is. This is very different.”

Ehrlichios­is symptoms include fever, lethargy, loss of appetite, weight loss, swelling, cloudy eyes or conjunctiv­itis, pain and stiffness and bleeding disorders such as nosebleeds.

The NT government has a current disease alert out.

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