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Comment by kulahan

2 days ago

It’s not usually very bad. My wife used to do epidemiology in Utah, and the four corner states have a few plague cases every year. Very easy to get from prairie dogs as well. Iirc, prairie dog colonies are separated based on which ones have the plague and which don’t.

I hope that the black footed ferret reintroduction efforts are successful (https://www.fws.gov/project/black-footed-ferret-recovery). There would be a lot less plague out there if so.

Lime disease has a similar relationship with predators that eat mice, so let's also keep an eye out for the owls and snakes.

  • Wonder if the same fleas that affect prarie dogs will also be at home on them?

    • I wonder also, although I kind of doubt it. As predators, they maintain relatively low population densities and are typically the first to go extinct when things get weird.

      Selection would favor pathogens that instead specialize for hosts that are hard to get rid of. Mice, cockroaches, prairie dogs...

  • How would reintroducing the black footed ferret reduce the plague ? It's not stated in that link.

  • >Lime disease Ah yes, good old Lime Disease, named after the town it was invented in, "Lime, Connecticut", Abraham Lime 1898, former student of Koch's lab in Germany.

When you say it's easy to get from prairie dogs, how exactly does that happen? Is it like, you're camping, and a prairie dog gets into your tent? How exactly does that people get exposed to a prairie dog?

  • It's not the prairie dogs themselves, but the fleas on the dogs. The carriers for the plague are fleas.

    • Yes, but every case I've heard of involved direct contact with the prairie dog. I can't imagine the fleas are that mobile without them.

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  • It's usually people whose job (or I guess hobby) involves managing prairie dogs. It's not usually ordinary civilians.