UC
Davis Examines Population Control
for Wild Horses
The following
is an article written by Kelly Stewart of the Dept. of Anthropology,
University of California, Davis, CA. Here Stewart describes in
more detail the justifications, efforts and future objectives
of the wild animal birth control efforts at UC Davis.
UC Davis --
It is a cruel irony that in this age of endangered species, conservationists
sometimes have to cull the animals they want to protect. One reason
is that wildlife can become a pest. White-tailed deer, for example,
have reached unprecedented numbers in the USA, due to a decline
in hunting. In urban areas, they eat peoples' gardens, collide
with cars, spread lyme disease, and so on. Even wildlife sanctuaries
can suffer from overpopulation, as is evident in some reserves
in Kenya and South Africa, where elephants have been blamed for-
widespread destruction of trees and alteration of the landscape.
In the past, we limited
animal populations mainly through hunting or large-scale culls. But these methods
are becoming, less and less ethically acceptable to the public. Scientists from
UC Davis are searching for alternative solutions, tackling the problem from the
other end of life's procession. Rather than increase death rates, why not lower
birth rates?
Over the past decade, Professor
Irwin Liu and his colleagues from the Department of Population, Health and Reproduction
at UCD's Vet School, have collaborated with scientists across the country to develop
an effective means of birth control for wildlife. It sounds like the perfect solution:
put animals on "the pill". But it's not that simple. For starters, how do you
get wild animals to take the correct dosage?
In the mid-eighties, reproductive
biologist Jay Kirkpatrick, in association with UCD, began a wild horse contraception
project on Assateague Island off
the coast of Maryland and Virginia. Bands of horses have roamed free on the island
for- centuries, but their numbers had grown to a point where they were beginning
to damage the habitat. Using a dart -gun, Kirkpatrick delivered steroid hormones
to stallions, to lower their sperm counts, and the equivalent of a "progesterone
pill" to mares, to prevent ovulation.
The exercise was not a success.
It proved too difficult to dart the animals often enough with sufficiently large
doses to maintain contraception. Furthermore, scientists worried about the transfer
of steroids up the food chain. Horse carcasses on Assateague are scavenged by
vultures, foxes and gulls, and it's possible that these animals could be adversely
affected by eating hormone-laced horse meat.
Meanwhile, back at UCD,
Professor Liu was testing a new technique of birth control on captive horses --
an inoculation against pregnancy. With this method, researchers inject a female
with a vaccine made from pigs' ovaries. This stimulates her immune system to produce
antibodies which then interfere with fertilization when she mates, possibly by
preventing sperm from penetrating the egg.
Kirkpatrick returned to
Assateague with the vaccine and this time he hit the jackpot. Just two doses,
given a few weeks apart, were sufficient to prevent conception in most mares for
a year, after which an annual booster maintained the effect. Not only this, but
the vaccine did not interfere with a current pregnancy, and its effect was reversible
once the boosters were stopped. Happily for the mares and their stallions,
inoculated females were still interested in sex and in fact, all other
normal wild horse behavior. Finally, no serious side effects appeared for four
years of treatment, after which the vaccine began to inhibit ovulation.
Since the first trials on
Assateague, 'immunocontraception', as it is called, has successfully reduced birth
rates in other species, including feral burros in the Virgin Islands and white-tailed
deer on Fire Island National Seashore in New York state. This method of controlling
deer numbers was far preferable to a previous trial with bow-hunting, when local
residents, relaxing on their porches, were treated to the sight of wounded deer
stumbling along the boardwalks. Current research at UCD includes a study of ways
to regulate the elk population at Pt. Reyes using immunocontraception .
We have entered an era
in which wildlife must be managed in order to be saved. The days when we could
conserve nature by leaving it alone are unfortunately gone. But we can try
to be as "hands-off" as possible by searching for benign, non-invasive methods
of management. In this quest, scientists at UC Davis are leading, the way.
Reproduced
with permission - © Kelly
Stewart
Dept.
of Anthropology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616
e-mail: kjstewart@ucdavis.edu