In free-ranging pigmy rattlesnakes, clinical signs of snake fungal disease varied seasonally and were negatively correlated with energetic status and mean air temperature. Severely infected snakes were in poor body condition but did not show deficits in innate immune function. Innate immunocompetence varied seasonally, but not in association with costly life-history stages.
Snake fungal disease (SFD) is caused by the fungus Ophidiomyces ophiodiicola and its documentation in wild snake populations has risen sharply in the past decade. Little is known regarding the fate of individual, free-ranging snakes afflicted with SFD. We monitored an afflicted population of pygmy rattlesnakes ( Sistrurus miliarius) at Lake Woodruff National Wildlife Refuge in Central Florida, US for 2 yr. The severity of SFD in individual snakes was unrelated to the probability of their recapture later in the study, and half of the snakes diagnosed as severely infected at the onset of the study were recaptured later with no clinical signs of SFD. The clinical progress of 12 serially recaptured individuals also showed that individuals cleared the infection and fluctuated between no or low and severe clinical signs over the 2-yr study.
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