Contraceptive vaccines for wildlife: a review.
TL;DR: Citation Kirkpatrick JF, Lyda RO, Frank KM.
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Abstract: Wildlife, free-ranging and captive, poses and causes serious population problems not unlike those encountered with human overpopulation. Traditional lethal control programs, however, are not always legal, wise, safe, or publicly acceptable; thus, alternative approaches are necessary. Immunocontraception of free-ranging wildlife has reached the management level, with success across a large variety of species. Thus far, the immunocontraceptive research and management applications emphasis have been centered on porcine zona pellucida and gonadotropin-releasing hormone vaccines. Contraceptive success has been achieved in more than 85 different wildlife species, at the level of both the individual animal and the population. At the population management level with free-ranging species, the primary focus has been on wild horses, urban deer, bison, and African elephants. The challenges in the development and application of vaccine-based wildlife contraceptives are diverse and include differences in efficacy across species, safety of vaccines during pregnancy, the development of novel delivery systems for wild and wary free-ranging animals, and the constraints of certain non-contraceptive effects, such as effects on behavior. Beyond the constraints imposed by the public and a host of regulatory concerns, there exists a real limitation for funding of well-designed programs that apply this type of fertility control.
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Citations
Fertility suppression of some wildlife species in southern Africa-a review.
TL;DR: This review discusses the methods that have been most commonly used for some wildlife species in southern Africa, including hormonal control and immunocontraception, and addresses the problem of androgen-related aggressive behaviours in elephant bulls and giraffe males.
Lack of spatial and behavioral responses to immunocontraception application in african elephants (loxodonta africana)
Audrey Delsink,Jay F. Kirkpatrick,Jj. van Altena,Henk J. Bertschinger,Sam M. Ferreira,Rob Slotow +5 more
TL;DR: It was concluded that PZP immunocontraception has no detectable behavioral or social consequences in elephants over the course of 11 yr, providing a convincing argument for the use of sustained immunocOntraception in the medium to long term as an important tool for elephant management.
Nanomaterial-dependent immunoregulation of dendritic cells and its effects on biological activities of contraceptive nanovaccines.
Pingping Xu,Tang Shuai,Luping Jiang,Lihua Yang,Dinglin Zhang,Shibin Feng,Tingting Zhao,Yajun Dong,He Wei,Ruibing Wang,Jianxiang Zhang,Zhiqing Liang +11 more
TL;DR: In vivo evaluations demonstrated that nanovaccines were more potent than that based on the complete Freund's adjuvant, with respect to inducing anti-FSHR antibody, reducing the sperm count, inhibiting the sperm motility, and increasing the teratosperm rate.
Improving wild animal welfare through contraception
Simon Eckerström‐Liedholm,Luke Hecht,Vittoria Elliott +2 more
TL;DR: Wildlife contraceptives may alleviate resource competition and associated negative welfare effects, increasing per capita resource availability and benefiting treated and untreated individuals, with stronger effects in contexts prioritizing wild animal welfare.
References
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TL;DR: It is shown that reproductive collapse in the critically endangered saiga antelope is likely to have been caused by a catastrophic drop in the number of adult males in this harem-breeding ungulate, probably due to selective poaching for their horns.
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Monitoring ovarian function in captive and free-ranging wildlife by means of urinary and fecal steroids
Bill L. Lasley,Jay F. Kirkpatrick +1 more
- 01 Jan 1991
TL;DR: Methods for monitoring and assessing reproductive status have been developed to allow both captive and free-ranging wildlife to be evaluated while avoiding chemical immobilization or physical restraint, and the current trend indicates increased application of these methods in this research area.
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•Journal Article
Remotely-delivered immunocontraception in feral horses.
TL;DR: The objectives of this study were to determine the effectiveness of remote delivery, test the contraceptive effectiveness of a PZP vaccine in free-roaming feral mares, determine the contraceptives effectiveness of the vaccine in pregnant and nonpregnant mare, and evaluate the safety of the vaccines for use in pregnant mares.
162
Fertility control in the bitch by active immunization with porcine zonae pellucidae: use of different adjuvants and patterns of estradiol and progesterone levels in estrous cycles.
TL;DR: Infertility in bitches immunized with PZP may be due to prevention of zzon penetration, because their antisera inhibited zona penetration of oocytes by spermatozoa in vitro, however, alterations in ovarian function preventing ovulation and luteinization could be involved in high-titered bitches.
Contraception in mares heteroimmunized with pig zonae pellucidae
TL;DR: Clinical, endocrinological and histological analyses of the ovaries and their function following regained fertility after immunization revealed no abnormalities and one mare remained infertile.