by Jeff
Mulhollem
Penn State University
April 25,
2018
UNIVERSITY
PARK, Pa. — Pennsylvania's black bear population is experiencing a mange
epidemic, and a Penn State research team will work with the state Game
Commission to gain a better understanding of the disease and develop strategies
to manage it.
Mange is a
highly contagious skin disease caused by parasitic mites that results in hair
loss and sometimes emaciation and death. It has afflicted mammals around the
world for centuries and likely much longer. To learn why the disease has grown
so common and severe in Pennsylvania bears in recent years, a small group of
biologists, immunologists and entomologists in Penn State's College of
Agricultural Sciences will study bear ecology, movement and immune response.
Researchers
also will focus on the genetics of the sarcoptes mites and ticks the bears are
carrying.
"Mange
is a recurring problem in Pennsylvania but it is occurring at an accelerating
and seemingly unprecedented pace in bears," said lead researcher Erika
Machtinger, assistant professor of entomology and a certified wildlife
biologist. "We want to work with the Game Commission to try to figure out
what's going on. Different species of skin mites can be found in bears in other
states but this severe outbreak of sarcoptic mange is a unique Pennsylvania situation."
Researchers
will help a Game Commission crew trap, radio collar and then track 36 bears for
two years, analyzing tissue and blood samples taken from the animals. Bear
trapping for the study began this month and will continue through the summer.
People who see bears with mange in Pennsylvania are urged to contact the
appropriate Game Commission region office: Northwest, 814-432-3187; Southwest,
724-238-9523; Southcentral, 814-643-1831; Northcentral, 570-398-4744;
Northeast, 570-675-1143; and Southeast, 610-926-3136.
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