Restoration of a bighorn sheep population impeded by Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae exposure Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) were once extirpated from the Black Hills region of South Dakota, U.S.A., mirroring declining populations throughout North America. Since the 1960s, several reintroductions have occurred in the Black Hills to reestablish populations, with varying success. We translocated 26 bighorn sheep from Alberta, Canada, to the Black Hills (February 2015) to restore bighorn sheep to their historic range. Due to prior examinations of causespecific survival, subsequent genetic diversity and disease prevalence analyses were required to evaluate success of the restoration effort. We measured a mean allelic diversity of 5.23 (SE=0.44 [mean number of alleles]) and an observed heterozygosity of 0.71 (SE=0.06; expected=0.640.05) in the translocated individuals. Translocated bighorn sheep tested negative for Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae at capture. An autogenous vaccine was administered prior to release in an attempt to safeguard the translocated bighorn sheep from infection with a strain known to be resident in adjacent bighorn sheep populations. However, the year following the translocation, a different strain of M. ovipneumoniae was associated with a pneumonia outbreak that resulted in 57.9% mortality. Our results suggest that allelic diversity and heterozygosity were sufficient for longterm herd establishment, reducing the potential for founder effects. However, the overwhelming mortality associated with pneumonia, via the transfer of M. ovipneumoniae from an unknown source, limited the success or our reintroduction efforts. Successful attempts to restore bighorn sheep to their historic ranges must consider and mitigate potential routes for M. ovipneumoniae transmission pre and postreintroduction.

published proceedings

  • RESTORATION ECOLOGY

altmetric score

  • 1.85

author list (cited authors)

  • Werdel, T. J., Jenks, J. A., Besser, T. E., Kanta, J. T., Lehman, C. P., & Frink, T. J.

citation count

  • 4

publication date

  • March 2020

publisher