Alopecia in Bats

Pub Date : 2022-08-18 DOI:10.3161/15081109ACC2022.24.1.017
C. N. Martín-Regalado, S. C. Pedersen, M. Lavariega
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Reports of hair loss in bats in the wild are scarce and have not been summarized. We performed a literature review to summarize the affected species, prevalence, clinic diagnostics, and factors that cause alopecia in bats. We found only 28 studies that reported alopecia in 26 species of bats, within five families. Together, these studies examined 10,186 bats, of which 10.8% had alopecia, with a sex bias to females (3:1). Most studies did not identify a specific ethologic agent responsible for the hair loss. However, alopecia was attributed to five non-exclusive causes: endocrine factors related to reproduction and lactation, ectoparasites, the ingestion of toxins, and environmental stress. In the latter, anthropogenic stressors are of increasing concern — the incidence of alopecia in urban areas reflects reproductive stress, limited food availability, roost disturbance, and pollution in these poor-quality environments. Better reporting of alopecia in bats would help us better understand this pathology and to precisely measure environmental stress in these animals.
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蝙蝠脱发
关于野生蝙蝠脱发的报道很少,也没有得到总结。我们进行了一项文献综述,总结了蝙蝠脱发的受影响物种、患病率、临床诊断和导致脱发的因素。我们发现,在五个科的26种蝙蝠中,只有28项研究报告了脱发。这些研究总共检查了10186只蝙蝠,其中10.8%患有脱发,对雌性有性别偏见(3:1)。大多数研究都没有确定导致脱发的特定行为学因素。然而,脱发可归因于五个非排他性原因:与生殖和哺乳有关的内分泌因素、体外寄生虫、摄入毒素和环境压力。在后者中,人为压力源越来越令人担忧——城市地区脱发的发生率反映了这些低质量环境中的生殖压力、有限的食物供应、栖息地干扰和污染。更好地报告蝙蝠脱发将有助于我们更好地了解这种病理学,并准确测量这些动物的环境压力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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