She was Lo, plain Lo, in the morning, standing four feet ten in one sock. She was Lola in slacks. She was Dolly at school. She was Dolores on the dotted line. But in my arms she was always Lolita.
The article doesn't make clear whether other bear species at the same institution are affected, or just spectacled bears.
Presumably the vets are well ahead of the hack reporters who failed to ask obvious questions (but why should they? this is tabloid stuff).
I imagine the inquiry will look first for ectoparasites. Ursocoptic mange comes to mind, but it could be a mite that has made the leap from another species. Normally ectoparasites are very species-specific, though.
Then nutrition--look at diet for possible missing micronutrients. Start/increase feeding of appropriate fresh fruits and veg, to see if improvements. There may also be chemical contaminants in a highly processed diet of biscuits or canned foods.
Behavioral aspects--elevated stress hormones from inappropriate social groupings and/or lack of behavioral enrichment.
Novel infectious agents--various tests on skin biopsies w/ banked tissue or hair samples as controls.
A genetic defect is unlikely. Management of captive populations of endangered/threatened species is pretty sophisticated these days and involves regular planned exchanges of animals among different institutions for breeding purposes.
So I read the piece before the jump. And I look at the picture of the healthy bear. And I try to imagine what this bear will look like without any hair on its head.
The picture of the bear balding *everywhere* completely freaked me out.
Posted by crystabrittany on November 4, 2009 at 11:03 PM
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