Generalized dermatophytosis caused by Trichophyton equinum in 8 juvenile black bears in California

Author:

Clothier Kristin A.1ORCID,Watson Katherine D.1,Mete Aslı1ORCID,Giannitti Federico2ORCID,Anderson Mark1,Munk Brandon3,McMillin Stella3,Clifford Deana L.3,Rudd Jaime3,Shirkey Nicholas3,Famini Dan4,Woods Leslie1

Affiliation:

1. California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System, University of California–Davis, CA, USA

2. Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria (INIA), Plataforma de Investigación en Salud Animal, La Estanzuela, Colonia, Uruguay, and Veterinary Population Medicine Department, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN, USA

3. California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Rancho Cordova, CA, USA

4. Sonoma County Wildlife Rescue, Petaluma, CA, USA

Abstract

From 2014–2019, 8 juvenile black bears ( Ursus americanus) from different geographic regions were presented to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife because of emaciation, alopecia, and exfoliative dermatitis that resulted in death or euthanasia. Autopsy and histopathology revealed that all 8 bears had generalized hyperkeratotic dermatitis, folliculitis, and furunculosis. Skin structures were heavily colonized by fungal hyphae and arthrospores; fungal cultures of skin from 7 bears yielded Trichophyton equinum, a zoophilic dermatophyte reported only rarely in non-equid species. Additional skin conditions included mites (5), ticks (2), and coagulase-negative Staphylococcus sp. infections (2). No other causes of morbidity or mortality were identified. Molecular comparisons performed at the University of Texas Fungal Reference Laboratory determined that all isolates produced identical banding patterns, potentially representing a clonal population. Dermatophytosis is commonly localized and limited to the stratum corneum of the epidermis and hair follicles. Generalized disease with dermal involvement is rare in immunocompetent individuals; illness, malnutrition, age, or immunosuppression may increase susceptibility. Underlying causes for the severe disease impact in these bears were not evident after physical or postmortem examination. The mechanism by which bears from different geographic locations had severe, T. equinum–associated dermatophytosis from a potentially clonal dermatophyte could not be explained and warrants further investigation.

Funder

California Department of Fish and Wildlife

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary

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