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Hundreds of koalas in Australia are one step closer to being protected from chlamydia.
About 400 koalas are set to receive a dose of a chlamydia vaccine as part of a trial at Queensland’s Australia Zoo Wildlife Hospital,ReutersandThe Guardianreported. Because chlamydia is so pervasive among koalas, those running the trial hope that it will help the species' long-term survival.
The koalas involved in the trial, which kicked off on Friday, will get a jab of vaccine and a microchip, so that they can be tracked, before being sent back into the wild.
Chlamydia, typically a sexually transmitted disease, can also be transferred from mother koalas to their joeys. Some koala populations in areas of south-east Queensland and New South Wales have as high as a 50 percent infection rate,The Guardianreported.
Timms and several of his colleaguespublished a report inNaturelast year about their chlamydia vaccine for koalas, which was developed over 10 years and shows promise of being more effective than antibiotics.
“Unfortunately 10 or even 20 percent of animals that go through the [Australia Zoo] wildlife hospital come back to the hospital. In a lot of cases, if you just treat them with antibiotics, they often come back with chlamydial disease again,” Timms toldThe Guardian.
“We know that it can reduce infection levels,” he added of the vaccine, which has already been tested on koalas in eight smaller trials. “We know that the vaccine is safe. It causes no problems at all.”
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Amber Gillett, an Australia Zoo Wildlife Hospital Wildlife veterinarian and its coordinator of research, called chlamydia “a cruel disease that causes debilitating conjunctivitis, bladder infections and at times, infertility,” according toReuters.
Infected Koalas are also at risk of blindness and even death.
The trial aims to help protect the koala population, which could soon become endangered.
Brush fires, heat waves, lack of drinking water and land clearing are all contributing factors to the koala population’s decline.
“Urgent action to stop land clearing in prime Koala habitat is required if we are to save our beloved national animal from peril,” Deborah Tabart, Chair of the Australian Koala Foundation, said last month.
source: people.com