Canine distemper has been found in African wild dogs living close to the northeastern boundary of Serengeti National Park, Tanzania. ©Brad Josephs

The world’s tigers face considerable threats today: poaching, habitat loss, depletion of their prey and retaliatory kills by humans when the big cats take livestock. But now, a new threat has surfaced: the canine distemper virus (CDV).

While we’ve known for years that CDV affects domestic dogs, recently the virus has been spreading to new regions and causing mortality in tigers, as well as in several other wildlife species. In fact, “canine distemper” may be a misnomer, given the diversity of wild animals it now infects.

Just this month, in February 2015, experts from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Cornell University’s College of Veterinary Medicine and the University of Glasgow’s Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine convened the first “Vaccines for Conservation” meeting at the WCS’s Bronx Zoo in New York City. They concluded that CDV could be the final straw that causes some big cat populations to go extinct.

But is vaccinating wild animals, such as tigers, a viable and safe option?

Added to other threats, disease now jeopardizes the world’s tigers. This tiger was photographed in captivity. ©John T. Andrews

Tanking tiger numbers

The Vaccines for Conservation convention participants looked at examples of distemper outbreaks around the world, including a 2010 case study of the Amur tiger population in Russia’s Sikhote-Alin Nature Reserve. In 2009 and 2010, six adult tigers died or disappeared from the reserve, and CDV was confirmed in two of the dead tigers. That led scientists to conclude that CDV played a role in the overall decline of the population, which decreased from 38 individuals to nine between 2007 and 2012.

Another key finding in that 2010 study was that smaller populations of tigers seem to be more vulnerable to extinction by CDV. Populations consisting of 25 individuals or less were 1.65 times more likely to decline in the next 50 years when CDV was present.

Unfortunately today, in most places where wild tigers persist, they are limited to populations of less than 25 adult breeding individuals.

The canine distemper virus has even found its way into populations of lions. ©Eric Rock

But the threat of canine distemper, however, now extends beyond tigers. The virus has taken a toll on a number of the planet’s other carnivores of conservation concern, including African wild dogs, North American black-footed ferrets, highly endangered Ethiopian wolves and Serengeti lions. That has caused some to suggest that a CDV vaccination program for wildlife be instituted.

Vaccine viability

Traditionally, managing the canine distemper virus has focused on the vaccination of domestic dogs. But while the dogs benefit from this practice (and local people, too, in the case of rabies), it often fails to prevent the disease in wild species that share their environment with dogs. That’s because other small-bodied, wild carnivores can act as alternative reservoirs of the infection and spread it to the larger endangered species.

But vaccinating wild animals such as tigers, lions and wolves, of course, is not without risk. Vaccines are capable of causing mild infections in animals. And while we’re able to closely monitor the dogs that live among us for adverse reactions, keeping an eye on threatened and endangered individuals—and intervening when there is a problem—is much harder.

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Between 1985 and 1987, conservationists rescued the last black-footed ferrets surviving in the wild so that they could be bred in captivity to build up their numbers. Canine distemper would have wiped them out in the U.S. if it weren’t for that intervention.

Delivery of the vaccine to wild populations poses another challenge. Hypodermic darts are an option, but they are invasive and can injure animals if not placed properly. Laced bait could be used; however, bait is not always eaten by the targeted species, reducing the chances of the vaccine’s effectiveness and increasing the possibility it could harm other animals.

Finding the funding to build such a program into park and conservation budgets that are already struggling with other priorities won’t be easy. As some have pointed out, disease is a conservation issue that tends to be forgotten.

Although canine distemper would’ve killed off black-footed ferrets in the United States if it weren’t for a captive-breeding program, it’s possible that in the case of the Russian tigers, their wide dispersal across a large area would keep distemper from becoming their death knell. Still, if CDV broke out in more isolated tiger populations, such as in India, it could be devastating.

Given that some isolated populations of endangered species besieged by other threats could go extinct if hit by CDV, do you think it is appropriate—and feasible—to vaccinate them?

Here’s to finding your true places and natural habitats,

Candy