The population of vultures has declined due to the use of painkiller medicine given to animals, which caused kidney failure in vultures that consumed the treated animals. This medicine was banned in India in 2006.
To prevent Sloth fever, avoid contact with mosquitoes and biting midges, and use insect repellent and protective clothing.
The CDC issued a warning due to the spread of the Oropouche virus in regions near the US and to advise caution for residents, especially those traveling to affected areas.
No, despite the name, Sloth fever is not contracted via contact with sloths.
Yes, serious complications such as encephalitis and meningitis (inflammation of the brain and surrounding membranes) have occasionally been reported.
Sloth fever symptoms are similar to those of other viral infections, making it difficult to distinguish without specific medical testing.
Sloth fever has been reported in South America, Central America, and the Caribbean.
The Oropouche virus was first identified in 1955.
Sloth fever is not directly contagious between humans. It is transmitted through the bites of infected mosquitoes and biting midges.
The Oropouche virus was named after a village in Trinidad and Tobago where the virus was first isolated from an infected person.
Back in the day, vultures were the unsung heroes of the ecosystem. They’d scoop up dead animals, keeping things clean and stopping disease outbreaks. But then, humans introduced this drug called diclofenac for treating livestock. Sounds legit for cows and stuff, but it turned out to be a total disasRead more
Back in the day, vultures were the unsung heroes of the ecosystem. They’d scoop up dead animals, keeping things clean and stopping disease outbreaks. But then, humans introduced this drug called diclofenac for treating livestock. Sounds legit for cows and stuff, but it turned out to be a total disaster for our feathered friends.
When vultures fed on carcasses of animals treated with diclofenac, it caused fatal kidney failures—a condition we now call visceral gout. Basically, the drug messes up their system so badly that they literally drop dead. This crisis really hit hard in South Asia (think India, Pakistan, and Nepal) around the 1990s, slashing vulture numbers by crazy amounts.
Now, here’s the kicker: in 2006, India decided to flip the script and banned diclofenac for veterinary use. Instead, they pushed for safer alternatives like meloxicam, which don’t have the same toxic effects on vultures. But enforcing this ban has been a whole other struggle. Some folks still sneak in human versions of the drug for animals, so vultures are still getting hit with these dangerous substances.
And it doesn’t stop at just diclofenac. Other NSAIDs like aceclofenac and ketoprofen are also out there wreaking havoc on their health. With fewer vultures in the skies, nature’s cleanup crew is essentially getting ghosted—leading to an uptick in feral dogs and other scavengers that can spread diseases like rabies.
In short, the whole decline stems from this one drug turning a natural process into a public health crisis. It’s a wild mix of human error, enforcement struggles, and a cascade of ecological consequences. The story of the vultures is a major lesson on how one small change in how we handle livestock meds can ripple out and shake up an entire ecosystem.
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