
Article of the Month: Exotic
Pets in U.S. May Pose Health Risk
WASHINGTON - Exotic animals captured in the wild are streaming
into the U.S. by the millions with little or no screening
for disease, leaving Americans vulnerable to a virulent outbreak
that could rival a terrorist act.
Demand for such wildlife is booming as parents try to get
their kids the latest pets fancied by Hollywood stars and
zoos and research scientists seek to fill their cages.
More than 650 million critters — from kangaroos and
kinkajous to iguanas and tropical fish — were imported
legally into the United States in the past three years, according
to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service documents obtained by The
Associated Press under the Freedom of Information Act.
That's more than two for every American.
Countless more pets — along with animal parts and
meats — are smuggled across the borders as part of
a $10 billion-a-year international black market, second only
to illegal drugs.
Most wildlife arrive in the United States with no quarantine
and minimal screening for disease. The government employs
just 120 full-time inspectors to record and inspect arriving
wildlife. There is no requirement they be trained to detect
diseases.
"A wild animal will be in the bush, and in less than a week
it's in a little girl's bedroom," said Darin Carroll, a disease
hunter with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
While exotic pets from Africa, Asia and South America can
be cute and fashionable, scientists fear that bacteria and
viruses they carry can jump to humans and native animals.
Recent statistics raise the alarm.
FROM EXOTIC ANIMALS TO HUMANS:
Zoonotic diseases — those that jump to humans — account
for three quarters of all emerging infectious threats, the
CDC says. Five of the six diseases the agency regards as
top threats to national security are zoonotic, and the CDC
recently opened a center to better prepare and monitor such
diseases.
The Journal of Internal Medicine this month estimated that
50 million people worldwide have been infected with zoonotic
diseases since 2000 and as many as 78,000 have died.
U.S. experts don't have complete totals for Americans, but
partial numbers paint a serious picture:
_Hantavirus, which is carried by rodents and can cause acute
respiratory problems or death, has sickened at least 317
Americans and killed at least 93 since 1996.
_More than 770 people have been sickened since 2000 with
tularemia, a virulent disease that can be contracted from
rabbits, hamsters and other rodents. At least three people
have died. The plague, another animal-born disease, has sickened
at least 22 Americans and killed at least one.
_Three transplant patients in New England died last year
after receiving organs from a human donor who had been infected
with the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus from a pet hamster.
There have been 34 U.S. cases since 1993.
_More than 210,000 Americans were sickened between 2000
and 2004 with salmonella, and at least 89 died. Most infections
come from contaminated food — but up to 5 percent
have been linked to pets, especially such reptiles as iguanas
and turtles. And last year, at least 30 people in 10 states
were sickened with a drug-resistant form linked to hamsters
and other rodent "pocket pets."
Some of the scariest diseases to emerge since 2001 also
have been tied to exotic animals: One of the first times
the deadly Asian bird flu reached the West was in eagles
smuggled aboard a plane to Europe. Likewise, severe acute
respiratory syndrome, or SARS, is believed to have jumped
to people from caged civet cats in a Chinese market. The
cats are believed to have gotten the virus from bats.
PARIS HILTON'S BITE, OTHER RECENT THREATS:
Carroll, the disease hunter, knows the dangers well. For
the past three years, he has traveled the globe tracing the
origins of a monkeypox outbreak in 2003 that sickened dozens
of adults and children in the U.S. Midwest.
That disease, related to smallpox, is believed to have spread
to people from rodents imported from Africa as pets. While
no victims died, scientists are eager to understand the disease
so they can stop a future outbreak.
Another newly discovered threat involves a current rage
among exotic pet owners: a small carnivorous mammal with
sharp teeth called a kinkajou. The nocturnal, tree-dwelling
animals originally from Central and South America's rain
forests have a dangerous bite — as Paris Hilton recently
learned.
The actress used to carry her pet kinkajou named "Baby Luv" on
her shoulder as she partied. This summer, Hilton landed in
an emergency room when Baby Luv bit her on the arm.
The concern about a bite is real.
In 2005, a kinkajou bit a zookeeper in England on the wrist.
The keeper's hand became infected, and she almost lost her
fingers, said Dr. Paul Lawson, a University of Oklahoma microbiologist
who first identified a new bacterium specific to kinkajous.
The first antibiotics doctors prescribed didn't work, so
a combination of several was used to stop the aggressive
infection.
Scientists worry that most Americans are ignorant of the
threats, and the government's defenses are limited.
THE SCOPE OF THE PROBLEM:
Though such diseases can spread to humans in many ways,
the exotic pet trade is a growing concern because of its
lack of government oversight and its reliance on animals
caught in the wild.
The legal wildlife trade in the United States has more than
doubled in the past 15 years, the Fish and Wildlife Service
said.
Last year alone, there were more than 210 million animals
imported to the United States for zoos, exhibitions, food,
research, game ranches and pets. The imports included 203
million fish, 5.1 million amphibians, nearly 1.3 million
reptiles, 259,000 birds and 87,991 mammals.
Imported mammals caught in the wild range from macaque monkeys
and chinchillas to wallabies and kangaroos.
Only wild birds, primates and some cud-chewing wild animals
are required to be quarantined upon arriving in the United
States. The rest slip through with no disease screening,
except for occasional Agriculture Department checks for ticks.
"Taking an animal from the wild and putting it in your child's
bedroom is just not a good idea," said Paul Arguin, a CDC
expert on exotic animal imports. "We just don't know a
lot about the diseases these animals carry."
THE POTENTIAL DISEASES:
The known diseases that can jump from exotic pets to humans
are many:
Rodents can carry hantavirus as well as Bolivian hemorrhagic
fever, which causes high fever, muscle pain and severe bleeding
in humans and can lead to death.
Quarantines in 1989 and 1990 helped lead to the discovery
of a new strain of the hemorrhagic disease Ebola in some
primates. The primates either died or were killed.
Then there are the mystery diseases, which scientists have
yet to understand.
During the 1990s, desert jumping rodents called jerboas
were imported to Texas from Egypt as pets, according to Alan
Green, a wildlife expert. Many new owners fell ill with a
strange rash that defied treatment.
LOOPHOLES IN SCREENING OF LEGAL PETS:
Loopholes abound with legal imports, even when screening
and quarantine occurs.
For instance, the thousands of monkeys that are imported
each year for research from countries like China, Indonesia
and Vietnam are quarantined for at least 31 days. While the
monkeys are checked for tuberculosis, they aren't tested
for other diseases unless they show signs of sickness.
However, monkeys can carry dangerous viruses and bacteria
that don't make them sick but can harm people. For example,
herpes B virus is a pathogen carried by 80 to 90 percent
of adult macaques. The virus may not harm the macaques, but
humans can be infected and suffer severe neurological damage
or death.
In 1997, a 22-year-old researcher at Emory University's
Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta died from
herpes B virus weeks after a caged monkey splashed something
in her eye.
Though the CDC has prohibited importation of most monkeys
as pets since 1975, some macaques imported for research are
now being sold on the open market.
"Whatever researchers are using and importing in great numbers
is what we see in the pet trade," said April Truitt of the
Primate Rescue Center in Nicholasville, Ky.
The government acknowledges it doesn't track where animals
go after quarantine.
THE CHALLENGE POSED BY ILLEGAL SMUGGLING:
Illegal trade presents another challenge. "If you can think
of it, you can get it," said Mira Leslie, a disease expert
in Washington state.
Smugglers have been known to tape small tubes filled with
birds on their legs to smuggle them through airports or to
cut deep boxes into car seats filled with exotic wildlife
to drive across the Mexican border.
Inspectors have been on heightened alert looking for smuggled
birds since a man in 2004 smuggled two Crested Hawk-Eagles
on a flight from Bangkok, Thailand, to Brussels, Belgium.
He had wrapped them in white cloth and stuffed them into
handmade, wicker tubes that he carried in a handbag.
Officials later learned that a well-known bird collector
ordered the eagles for thousands of dollars. When the birds
were tested, they were found to be infected with a strain
of the H5N1 bird flu virus. Fortunately, no human was infected.
A BUREAUCRATIC MESS:
America's defenses are a bureaucratic nightmare. Laws are
outdated and no single agency is responsible for pre-empting
the next outbreak.
_The CDC is in charge of human health and the quarantine
of imported monkeys.
_The Agriculture Department has primary responsibility for
livestock health and the quarantining of wild bird imports
and wild cud-chewing animals.
_The Fish and Wildlife Service is charged with stopping
smuggled wildlife and enforcing laws that protect exotic
and endangered species.
"The three agencies don't work together," said Cathy Johnson-Delaney,
a veterinarian who advised the Agriculture Department during
the early 1990s. "We should be screening all critters coming
into the U.S. We aren't doing this."
The CDC's Arguin acknowledges oversight of wildlife imports
is reactive at best, noting that civet cats were banned from
sale only after the SARS outbreak and the increased screening
of birds occurred only after H5N1 started sweeping through
Asia.
NO AGREEMENT ON FUTURE SOLUTIONS:
Jasen Shaw, president of U.S. Global Exotics, one of the
largest American wildlife dealers, opposes banning exotic
animal imports but acknowledges, "It doesn't do the industry
any good to have diseases slip through."
Quarantine for all mammal imports — which are more
likely to carry diseases that jump to humans — could
be a solution.
Shaw said, however, that the industry would be wary of regulations
that were too restrictive. Mass quarantining would be very
expensive, he added.
Marshall Meyers, of the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council,
which represents the $30-billion-a-year pet industry, advocates
a risk-based system. Disease threats posed to humans by other
mammals is far greater than those posed by fish, he explained,
so tighter regulation on certain species might be warranted.
The CDC convened a meeting this spring to examine the lack
of oversight, exploring options but making no recommendations.
With no government action imminent, some support a private
solution.
"We should shift the burden to importers to prove that the
animal imports are safe," said William Karesh, a zoonotic
disease expert who works with the Wildlife Conservation Society.
He suggests exotic importers take out insurance to foot the
bill if their animals cause an outbreak.
"Why should you and I bear the cost of an outbreak when
the industry makes all the money off this trade?"
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By MARGARET EBRAHIM and JOHN SOLOMON, Associated Press Writers
Extracted from: Yahoo!
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