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Detecting Wildlife Illness and Death With New Early Alert System

Network of Wildlife Rehabilitation Organizations Helps Track Emerging Threats

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closeup of California brown pelican profile in foreground with ocean in background
California brown pelicans are among the sea birds that have faced unusual illness and death events in recent years. (Getty)

From domoic acid poisoning in seabirds to canine distemper in raccoons, wildlife face a variety of threats and illnesses. Some of those same diseases make their way to humans and domestic animals in our increasingly shared environment. 

A new early detection surveillance system for wildlife helps identify unusual patterns of illness and death in near real-time by tapping into data from wildlife rehabilitation organizations across California. This system has the potential to expand nationally and globally. It was created by scientists at the with partners at the and the nonprofit .

The Wildlife Morbidity and Mortality Event Alert System is described in published today in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

“Human-induced disturbances are contributing to a wide range of threats — habitat loss, invasive species introductions, pollution, disease, wildfires,” said co-lead author Terra Kelly, a wildlife epidemiologist at the and its within the School of Veterinary Medicine. “It speaks to the need for a system like this where we can better understand the threats facing wildlife populations and respond to them in a timely way so there’s less harm to wildlife.”

Front-line responders for wildlife

Wildlife rehabilitation workers are the front-line responders of the free-ranging animal world. They are the first to receive and tend to sick and injured wild animals. Their clinical reports carry a wealth of information that, when shared, can indicate broader patterns.

Until recently, such clinical reports were stored primarily on paper or isolated computer files. In 2012, Wild Neighbors Database Project co-founders Devin Dombrowski and Rachel Avilla created the , or WRMD, a free online tool now used by more than 950 rehabilitation organizations across 48 states and 19 countries to monitor patient care.

A common murre seabird is treated by wildlife rehabilitation specialists in California
Wildlife rehabilitation specialists from ٺƵ Oiled Wildlife Care Network and International Bird Rescue treat a common murre at the San Francisco Bay Oiled Wildlife Care and Education Center in Fairfield, California, in 2015. (Gregory Urquiaga/ٺƵ)

Dombrowski and Avilla brought the tool to CDFW, which connected with long-standing partners at ٺƵ to pilot an alert system using the database as its foundation.

“I'm thrilled that WRMD is not only useful for thousands of wildlife rehabilitators but that the data collected by them is used for morbidity and mortality monitoring,” co-author Dombrowski said. “To witness the WMME Alert System identifying data anomalies and alerting investigators is incredible.”

The CDFW is using the system to help identify and prioritize wildlife needs and conservation efforts.

“The near real-time information this system provides has allowed us to quickly follow up with diagnostic testing to identify the problem,” said Krysta Rogers, senior environmental scientist at the CDFW’s Wildlife Health Laboratory. “This system also has been instrumental in determining the geographic range and severity of the threat.”

How it works

To test the system, the scientists analyzed 220,000 case records collected between early 2013 to late 2018 to establish thresholds for triggering alerts. The dataset included records from 453 different species, from the common to the rare.

Map of California indicating wildlife rehabilitation organizations and cases of wildlife illness and death events
Figure 1 from the study indicates locations of cases (small blue dots) in California presenting to wildlife rehabilitation organizations (bigger blue dots) participating in the Wildlife Mortality and Mortality Event Alert System from 2013-2018. Red areas indicate a high kernel density of cases. (Proceedings from the Royal Society B)

The authors emphasize the alert system is pre-diagnostic. It alerts agencies to unusual patterns that may warrant further investigation to determine specific health threats.

The system detected several key events, including large admissions of:

  • Marine birds along the central and southern California coast in late spring 2016. Post-mortem examinations confirmed they were starving.
  • Marine birds in April 2017. Domoic acid toxicity was later confirmed as the cause of death.
  • Invasive Eurasian collared doves in 2016 with encephalitis and kidney disease. Investigations revealed pigeon paramyxovirus-1 as the cause of the event. This was the first detection of the virus emerging in Eurasian collared doves in this region of California.
  • Rock pigeons in the San Francisco Bay Area in 2017 with an emerging parasite.
  • Finches in 2016 and 2017 with seasonal conjunctivitis due to infection with Mycoplasma bacteria.

Human connections

Kelly notes that being able to monitor and rapidly detect such events is important for all species, humans included. For example, domoic acid intoxication is caused by harmful algal blooms, which are increasing in coastal and freshwater systems and threaten both wildlife and human health. Another example is West Nile virus, where bird deaths can serve as a sensitive indicator for risk to domestic animals and people.

The alert system is a complementary, inexpensive and efficient tool to add to state wildlife agencies’ toolbox of surveillance efforts. It combines machine-learning algorithms, natural language processing, and statistical methods used for classifying cases and establishing thresholds for alerts with the ecology and distribution of wildlife within California, said co-leading author Pranav Pandit, a researcher in the ٺƵ One Health Institute and its .

“The wildlife rehabilitation organizations’ data is making such valuable contributions,” Pandit said. “That’s all coming together in this highly adaptable surveillance system.”

Additional partners and co-authors on the study include Christine Kreuder Johnson and Michael Ziccardi of ٺƵ; Nicole Carion, Stella McMillin and Deana L. Clifford of the CDFW Wildlife Health Laboratory; Anthony Riberi of web development company Y3TI; and Erica Donnelly-Greenan of Moss Landing Marine Laboratories and the BeachCOMBERS Program.

The study was funded by a State Wildlife Grant from CDFW.

Media Resources

Media Contacts:

  • Terra Kelly, ٺƵ One Health Institute, trkelly@ucdavis.edu
  • Pranav Pandit, ٺƵ One Health Institute, EpiCenter for Disease Dynamics, pspandit@ucdavis.edu
  • Kat Kerlin, ٺƵ News and Media Relations, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu, 530-750-9195

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Human & Animal Health One Health

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