Anglia Ruskin Research Online (ARRO)
Browse

Characterisation, prevalence and severity of skin lesions caused by ophidiomycosis in a population of wild snakes

Download (1.45 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 10:14 authored by Steven JR Allain, David I Leech, Kevin Hopkins, Katharina Seilern-Moy, Julia Rodriguez-Ramos Fernandez, Richard A Griffiths, Becki Lawson

Ophidiomycosis is an emerging infectious disease affecting wild snakes in the Northern Hemisphere. Recently confirmed in Great Britain, the prevalence, severity and significance of ophidiomycosis has yet to be characterised in free-living snakes at a population level in Europe. Therefore, a population of barred grass snakes (Natrix helvetica) in eastern England was monitored for three seasons (May 2019 to October 2021), to investigate the prevalence (25.5%; 191/750 snakes) and severity of skin lesions and their aetiology. The most frequently observed skin lesion characteristics were changes in scale colour, crusting, and scale margin erosion. The majority of such lesions (96.9%; 185/191 snakes) was observed on the ventral surface along the length of the body. The severity of skin lesions was considered mild in more than half of the cases (53.1%; 98/191 snakes). Predominantly, skin lesions were observed in adult snakes (72.8%; 139/191 snakes). Combined histological examinations and qPCR tests of skin lesions from N. helvetica sloughs and/or carcasses confirmed a diagnosis of ophidiomycosis. Further targeted surveillance, supported by molecular and histological examinations to confirm skin lesion aetiology, is required to determine the extent to which our findings reflect the occurrence of ophidiomycosis in populations within wider landscapes.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

14

Issue number

1

Number of pages

11

Publication title

Scientific Reports

ISSN

2045-2322

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Location

England

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Item sub-type

Journal Article

Media of output

Electronic

Affiliated with

  • ARU Writtle Outputs