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Lady Cop Pioneer100© Member

BAH HUMBUG
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Posted: 07:26 pm |
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Study: Biting spread devil tumors
- Story Highlights
- 90 percent of the devil population on Australia's Tasmania have died
- Researchers found that tumors spread the population by biting during fights
- Tumors make it difficult for the animals to bite and catch prey; they starve
- Experts fear the animals could become extinct within two decades
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- Australian researchers have made a breakthrough discovery in understanding a rapidly spreading facial cancer that has decimated the country's Tasmanian Devil population.
Incurable facial cancer has nearly wiped out all of the Tasmanian Devils in Australia.
A lack of genetic diversity in the fierce, fox-like creatures has meant the animals' immune system does not try to fight off the disease, spread through biting, according to a study by the University of Sydney's School of Veterinary Science released last week.
The grotesque facial tumors were first spotted in the devil population around a decade ago in the northeast of Australia's island state of Tasmania, where 90 percent of the species has died of the disease.
The affliction is spreading south and west, and scientists estimate that within five years, there will be no disease-free population in Tasmania -- the only place in the world where the carnivorous marsupials exist outside zoos.
Seeking to understand how a facial cancer could be contagious, the University of Sydney researchers found that the tumors had originated from a single cell line that was spread through the population by biting.
Because Tasmanian devils are genetically similar, their bodies do not recognize the tumors as foreign cells and do not produce an effective immune response.
"We propose that this tumor arose in a single individual and has spread through the population by biting during fights for food and mates," lead researcher Katherine Belov said in a statement.
"Essentially, there are no natural barriers to the spread of the disease, so affected individuals must be removed from populations to stop disease transmission," she said.
Scientists estimate that the wild devil population has fallen from around 140,000 in the 1990s to 80,000 in 2006 due to the spread of the tumors. By making it difficult for the animals to bite and catch prey, the tumors usually lead to their death from starvation within six months.
Experts fear the remaining healthy animals could become extinct within the next two decades if they are not isolated from the disease.
Since the disease first emerged, scientists have been working to save the endangered marsupials, known for their powerful jaws and bloodcurdling growl. Programs to try to save them include plans to relocate breeding pairs to island sanctuaries.


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Amy Original500© Member

...going with the flow...
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Posted: 07:43 pm |
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OH! How sad!

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AussiePam Original500© Member

Wild Child
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Posted: 11:33 pm |
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geesch that looks really nasty!!!!
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Wendybird Original500© Member

Freakaloo Whackadoo.......
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Posted: 01:27 pm |
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Well it goes to show just how uneducated I am. I thought the Tasmanian Devil was just a cartoon character.
Poor little guys.
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AussiePam Original500© Member

Wild Child
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Posted: 08:15 am |
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I found a very interesting and detailed account of Tasmanian devils and this disease here.
http://www.dpiw.tas.gov.au/inter.nsf/WebPages/BHAN-5372WP?open
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Luvdawgs Pioneer100© Member

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Posted: 02:57 pm |
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I hope they're able to save the poor little guys from extinction. 
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Lady Cop Pioneer100© Member

BAH HUMBUG
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Posted: 11:57 pm |
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The lesions are grotesque and deadly to the devils
Hope over Tasmanian Devil cancer
By Phil Mercer
BBC News, Sydney 
The disease has left Tasmanian Devils at risk of extinction
Australia experts say a Tasmanian Devil called Cedric could hold the key to the survival of the embattled species.
The world's largest marsupial carnivore is facing extinction from a mystery facial cancer.
But scientists say Cedric appears to be naturally resistant to the contagious tumours which have killed half the devil population in Tasmania.
Cedric is the first Tasmanian Devil to have shown any immunity from the disfiguring disease.
Infected animals become so consumed by the cancer they can no longer eat or see and eventually die of starvation.
Breakthrough
Cedric was captured in western Tasmania last year, along with his half-brother, Clinky.
Both were injected with dead tumours by scientists. Clinky produced no antibodies, but Cedric did and appears to have built-in defences against the mystery illness.
The experiments have now moved up a gear.
Researcher Alex Kriess says the pair have had live cancer cells inserted into their faces.
"They haven't developed a tumour so far," he said. "We injected very few cells so it might take a while until they develop anything that we can see."
Cedric's apparent resistance to the disease has been seen as a significant breakthrough.
The facial tumours are decimating devil numbers on Tasmania's east coast. Cedric is from a genetically different population on the other side of the island.
Scientists hope marsupials that share his genetic pattern could also be immune to the cancer or capable of responding to a vaccine.
If real progress is not made soon, experts worry that the Tasmanian Devil could be extinct within 20 years.
Last edited on 12:00 am by Lady Cop


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Amy Original500© Member

...going with the flow...
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Posted: 12:16 am |
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Come on break through!!!
Just think though...if this had happened just 50 years ago...they may be extinct now...but in this day...the potential to save this species is a real possibility! 
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