Primates - Characteristics
Suborder: Catarrhine primates
Old World Monkeys (OWM)
- nutrients they need?
Suborder: Platyrrhine primates
New World Monkeys (NWM)
- nutritional considerations
important resrictions on primates
CFIA regulations for primates
Requires Unique
identification
CITES regulations for primates
Appendix I
* Species that are threatened
with extinction and CITES
prohibits international trade
in specimens of these
species (except in select
non-commercial trades)
* Chimpanzee
* Many Spider monkeys
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Appendix II
* not necessarily threatened
with extinction currently
but that may become so
unless trade is closely
controlled
* Rhesus & Cynomolgus macaques
* Common marmoset
* Baboons
association of zoos and aquariums guidelines
AZA White Paper on Personal Possession of Non-Human Primates AZA Position (July 2015)
– Personal possession of non-human primates has significant negative
implications for animal welfare and health as well as public health and safety
– The AZA does not support personal possession of non-human primates and
encourages AZA member organizations not to participate in animal acquisition
and transfer activities that may facilitate the personal possession of non-
human primates
– AZA member organizations are increasingly being asked to shelter and
care for non-human primates that have been abandoned or
confiscated from personal possession sources, often leading to ethical
and SSP (Species Survival Plan) sustainability dilemmas
Anthropozoonosis:
A disease of either animals or man that may be
transmitted from 1 species to another
> ie. we can give it to animals
important disease for OWM
important diseases for NWM
Non-conditioned, wild-caught NHPs can carry
significant zoonoses, such as…
– Arbovirus (yellow fever), Ebola virus, Marburg virus
– Meliodosis (Burkholderia pseudomallei) – suppurative and caseous lesions in skin and organs
– Monkey pox virus (recent outbreak Summer 2022 – not known to be from NHPs)
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* Rabies virus– may be some NHP-adapted rabies
strains, 20 human cases suspected from marmosets
* HIV-1 – originated from SIV (chimpanzees)
- Herpes B Virus – MHV-1
Herpes B Virus – MHV-1
- what is this? signs? human relevance?
Most important for humans, zoonotic from macaques: can be lethal to humans
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* Naturally occurring
α-herpesvirus of macaques
* Clinical signs: similar to Herpes
simplex I in humans
* Disease generally undetectable
in host or minimal signs
* Shedding may be inapparent
and short-lived
* Infection acquired early in life
(fighting, sexual activity)
* No treatment or vaccination
* Colony monitoring
* SPF colonies
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In humans:
* P.E. Day 10 – sore eye
* P.E. Day 14 – severe headache,
hospitalized
* P.E. Day 15 – antiviral Rx
* P.E. Day 42 – life support discontinued
HBV - Risk Reduction? how bad is it for humans?
Herpes B Virus – MHV-1 - what do we do if we get bitten?
Anthropozoonoses - what can we give NHPs? which are of concern?
– Measles
– Tuberculosis
* Hepatitis A and B may be transmitted to and from NHPs
Primates - Measles
- what type of virus?
- signs?
- lesions?
- source?
- prevention?
Tuberculosis (Mycobacterium spp)
- who is resistant?
- more commonly implicated?
- signs?
- testing?
Pneumococcal pneumonia
- what agent?
- significance, connection with other diseases?
- signs?
- histo?
- what other agents?
OWM - Enteric disease - which are important? transmission, signs, treatment?
Fecal agents of concern in primates
include
* Shigella spp, Campylobacter spp, Salmonella spp, amoebiasis, giardiasis
* Universal enteric precautions
* Fecal-oral exposure
* Inapparent shedding and carriers
* Clinical signs: diarrhea, anorexia, lethargy
* Treatment: supportive, evaluate husbandry, Peptobismal, Sulfasalazine, electrolytes, rarely antibiotics
CFIA Quarantine for primates?
Similar requirements for quarantine before export and on arrival
* Isolated for at least thirty (30) days immediately prior to export
and remain free from signs of communicable diseases.
– negative results for tuberculosis using mammalian old
tuberculin (MOT)
– Faecal testing - negative results by culture for Salmonella,
Shigella and Yersinia, negative for endoparasites
– Prophylaxis for endo- and ectoparasites including anti-
protozoan treatment for two weeks
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Additional precautions for laboratory macaques
* Serology for Herpes B, SIV and other simian retroviruses
* Measles vaccination
Bloat (Acute gastric dilatation)
OWM & NWM
- causes
Endometriosis macaques
- signs, lesions, tx
Stereotypical behaviours of primates