The exceedingly high mortality rates generally associated with artificially raising neonatal moose frequently can be attributed to improper nutritional management and poor husbandry techniques. Dietary-induced diarrhea caused by inappropriate milk replacers is common in moose calves raised in captiv
Nutritional investigations and management of captive moose
β Scribed by Einav Shochat; Charles T. Robbins; Steven M. Parish; Paul B. Young; Thomas R. Stephenson; Alma Tamayo
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 118 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0733-3188
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Historically, moose have been difficult to maintain in captivity when on diets of grass or legume hays and grain due to enteritis that frequently leads to chronic diarrhea/wasting disease. The development of wood-fiber diets has increased the lifespan of moose in captivity, but these diets do not completely prevent chronic wasting. Purina Mills (St. Louis, MO) hypothesized that captive moose are unable to digest starch that escapes the rumen, and therefore abnormal bacterial fermentation in the hindgut causes chronic diarrhea. An earlier study found no evidence of a digestive problem, so we tested the hypothesis that moose have difficulty metabolizing excess propionate produced from the fermentation of starch found in traditional cervid rations and high-grain wood-fiber diets. When challenged with an i.v. propionate load, moose metabolized propionate similar to healthy mule deer and domestic livestock. We then tested the hypothesis that grass forage is an initiating factor to chronic diarrhea/wasting and further hypothesized that grass, alfalfa, and other agriculture-based forages in association with an anaerobic bacteria produce inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in moose. Captive moose that had ad libitum access to a wood-fiber pelleted moose diet and grazed in grass pastures developed chronic wasting symptoms at 2-4 years of age and died at 4.7 Β± 0.3 years unless restricted from grass before the development of advanced symptoms. We isolated Bacteroides vulgatus in the feces and successfully treated a moose with chronic diarrhea/wasting disease with longterm metronidazole therapy, suggesting that the chronic enteritis causing wasting disease arises from a bacteria-associated defective immunosuppressive response similar to IBD in other species. Further support for the IBD cause of wasting in moose is that this animal will relapse within hours if the metronida-
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