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In general, wildlife will shy away from pets. However, it is always a good idea to keep pets — and pet food — at a safe distance from wildlife to prevent conflicts. It is important to keep in mind that wild animals are looking to survive, and conflicts with companion animals are often a result of wildlife simply trying to defend themselves, their young, their food, or their territory.
Listed below are some tips pet owners can take to proactively ensure that companion animals and wildlife peacefully share the great outdoors harmoniously.
Giardia
Giardia lamblia is a common single-celled parasite that can cause an illness of the intestines known as Giardiasis. This disease can be found throughout the world and is widespread among mammalian, avian, and reptile species.
Your dog or cat might become infected through:
Young companion animals have a higher risk of illness than adult dogs and cats.
It is also possible to be infected and show no symptoms.
The bacterium that causes Lyme disease can be spread to both people and animals through the bite of small, infected ticks. These ticks require constant, high relative humidity at ground level, and therefore are most common in the northeastern and coastal states, the upper Midwest, and the Pacific Northwest. Lyme disease is most often spread during the late spring through the early fall seasons. Ticks live on low-lying brush and grassy areas and crawl onto animals and people who come into contact with these plants.
Although people generally associate deer with Lyme disease, at least 27 species of mammals serve as efficient hosts for deer ticks, and over 125 vertebrate species serve as effective hosts for nymphs (immature ticks).
Most companion animals that test positive for Lyme disease are not clinically ill, which can make it difficult to identify animals that need treatment.
Lyme is diagnosed through a blood test.
Companion animals may not show symptoms for 2-5 months. After that time, typical symptoms include:
Rabies, a disease of the nervous system, was rare in Massachusetts for decades, appearing primarily only in a very small percentage of bats. However, an outbreak of raccoon rabies, which originated in the mid-Atlantic states in the late 1970’s, made its way to New England and is now one of several strains of rabies impacting wildlife.
You can NOT tell if an animal has rabies just by looking at it. Some infected animals may act strangely or aggressively, but others may not.
All mammals can contract rabies, but in Massachusetts those primarily affected are: raccoons, bats, skunks, foxes, and occasionally woodchucks. Birds, rabbits, opossums, squirrels, chipmunks, rats, mice, and other small rodents are rarely affected. Snakes, turtles, lizards, frogs, toads, salamanders, fish, and insects do not get rabies.
Rabies in animals can only be confirmed after death through examination of the brain.