National Wildlife Health Center
Wildlife Health Bulletin 2013-02
Snake Fungal Disease in the United States
To: Natural Resource/Conservation Managers
From: Dr. Jonathan Sleeman, Center Director, USGS National Wildlife Health
Center
Date: April 22, 2013
Snake Fungal Disease (SFD) is an emerging disease in certain populations of
wild snakes in the eastern and midwestern United States. While fungal
infections were occasionally reported in wild snakes prior to 2006, recently
the number of free-ranging snakes with fungal dermatitis submitted to the
USGS National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC) and other diagnostic
laboratories has been increasing. Laboratory analyses have demonstrated that
the fungus Chrysosporium ophiodiicola is consistently associated with SFD,
but often, additional fungi are isolated from affected snakes. At this time,
definitive evidence that C. ophiodiicola causes SFD is inconclusive. As its
name implies, SFD is only known to afflict snakes.
To date, the NWHC has confirmed fungal dermatitis (or the suspected fungal
pathogen in association with skin lesions) in wild snakes from nine states,
including Illinois, Florida, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York,
Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. However, it is suspected that SFD is more
widespread in the United States than is currently documented. Multiple
species of snakes have been diagnosed with SFD at the NWHC (see figures in
attached PDF; view additional photographs at
http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/disease_information/other_diseases/snake_fungal_disease.jsp),
including northern water snake (Nerodia sipedon), eastern racer (Coluber
constrictor), rat snake (Pantherophis obsoletus species complex), timber
rattlesnake (Crolatus horridus), massasauga (Sistrurus catenatus), pygmy
rattlesnake (Sistrurus miliarius), and milk snake (Lampropeltis triangulum).
The most consistent clinical signs of SFD include scabs or crusty scales,
subcutaneous nodules, premature separation of the outermost layer of the
skin (stratum corneum) from the underlying skin (or abnormal molting), white
opaque cloudiness of the eyes (not associated with molting), or localized
thickening or crusting of the skin (hyperkeratosis). Skin ulcers, swelling
of the face, and nodules in the deeper tissues of the head have also been
documented. Clinical signs of SFD and disease severity may vary by snake
species. Aside from the presence of fungi with disease-associated lesions,
specific pathological criteria for the disease have not yet been established.
While mortality has been associated with some cases of SFD, population-level
impacts of the disease are not yet widely known and are difficult to assess
due to the cryptic and solitary nature of snakes, and a general lack of
long-term monitoring data. In New Hampshire, clinical signs consistent with
SFD were associated with a 50 percent decline of an imperiled population of
timber rattlesnakes from 2006 to 2007. In areas where susceptible snake
species occur in small, isolated populations, the added threat of SFD may
threaten viability of these populations. In other regions, SFD has been
observed without suspected or, as yet, documented population declines.
Several agencies, organizations, researchers, and other key stakeholders,
including the NWHC, are working together to investigate this potentially
emerging disease and to learn more about the impacts that SFD is having on
snake populations in the eastern and midwestern United States. We encourage
conservation agencies and natural resource managers to contact the NWHC if
snakes with clinical signs consistent with SFD are encountered.
References:
Clark, R.W., M.N. Marchand, B.J. Clifford, R. Stechert, and S. Stephens.
2010. Decline of an isolated timber rattlesnake (Crotalus horridus)
population: Interactions between climate change, disease, and loss of
genetic diversity. Biological Conservation 144:886-891.
Allender, M.C., M. Dreslik, S. Wylie, C. Phillips, D.B. Wylie, C. Maddox,
M.A. Delaney, and M.J. Kinsel. 2011. Chrysosporium sp. infection in eastern
massasauga rattlesnakes. Emerging Infectious Diseases 17:2383-2384.
Rajeev, S., D.A. Sutton, B.L. Wickes, D.L. Miller, D. Giri, M. Van Meter,
E.H. Thompson, M.G. Rinaldi, A.M. Romanelli, J.F. Cano, and J. Guarro. 2009.
Isolation and characterization of a new fungal species, Chrysosporium
ophiodiicola, from a mycotic granuloma of a black rat snake (Elaphe obsoleta
obsoleta). Journal of Clinical Microbiology 47:1264-1268.

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