Ruma National Park,
The mighty rhinos living in a national park in Kenya face a new threat: microscopic, drug-resistant bacteria.
Scientists behind a study in a recent issue of New York-based academic journal EcoHealth
discovered that bacteria samples found in the endangered animals in
Ruma National Park, a protected area on the shores of Lake Victoria in
western Kenya, had developed alarming levels of antibiotic resistance.
The rhinos appear to have become unexpected casualties of the global overuse of the drugs.
Resistance
to them is growing because people take the drugs for non-bacterial
diseases; don’t finish drug courses, allowing bacteria to recover and
adapt; and because many farmers overuse the medicines on livestock.
Antibiotic
use and abuse in Kenya has been rampant for decades, elevating levels
of drug-resistant bacteria in people, livestock and now wildlife.
The team of scientists, which included Maseno
University PhD student Collins Kipkorir Kebenei, used faecal samples to
study resistance levels in the bacteria found in 16 black rhinos.
They
isolated samples of E. coli in both rhino and human waste and studied
how resistant they were to eight of the most commonly used antibiotics:
ampicillin, gentamicin, tetracycline, cotrimoxazole, chloramphenicol,
ceftriaxone, amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, and erythromycin.
Resistance
levels in the bacteria found in rhinos and that found in humans were
comparable for four of the antibiotics. The bacteria in rhinos was more
resistant than that in humans for two of them.
That’s
a problem because rhinos—already under major threat from poaching—are
susceptible to the bacterial disease bovine tuberculosis, researchers in
South Africa’s Kruger National Park have found.
Antibiotic resistance could make treatment harder.
“If
they (rhinos) are sick, they need to be treated – and so what kind of
medication can be used on these animals?” Kebenei said in the university
lab, as his adviser and co-author, zoology professor Patrick Onyango,
looked on.
Rhinos are already
critically endangered. There are only about 29,000 alive, according to
the International Rhino Foundation. Around five percent of them are in
Kenya.
It’s unclear how the rhinos
are being exposed to the drug-resistant bacteria. It could be through
drinking at the Lambwe River, which runs through Ruma National Park and
carries waste containing antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Or it could be through contact with the rangers protecting them from poachers.
Onyango said that although attention was focused on poaching, antibiotic resistant infections are a new and insidious threat.
“There
are people who are hawking antibiotics in bus stations,” added David M.
Onyango, a lecturer in Maseno University’s zoology department who also
co-authored the study. “There is no proper policy and regulation on
their use.”
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