This edition first published 2019
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Library of Congress Cataloging‐in‐Publication Data
Names: Hahn, Alicia, author.
Title: Zoo and wild mammal formulary / Alicia Hahn.
Description: Hoboken, NJ : Wiley‐Blackwell, 2019. | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Identifiers: LCCN 2019011595 (print) | LCCN 2019012922 (ebook) | ISBN 9781119514893 (Adobe PDF) | ISBN 9781119515081 (ePub) | ISBN 9781119515050 (paperback)
Subjects: | MESH: Veterinary Drugs | Mammals | Animals, Zoo | Animals, Wild | Drug Therapy–veterinary | Formulary
Classification: LCC SF916.5 (ebook) | LCC SF916.5 .H34 2019 (print) | NLM SF 916.5 | DDC 636.089/51–dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019011595
Cover Design: Wiley
Cover Image: © Paul A. Selvaggio
This book was born out of a clinical need voiced by myself and my many colleagues in Zoo, Exotic, and Wildlife medicine. For a number of years, I have been needing a resource similar to the Exotic Animal Formulary by Dr Carpenter, but for Zoo and Wild mammals. I hoped “someone” would write such a book, but eventually out of frustration elected to pursue it myself. In all honesty this was a naïve undertaking, as I had no idea how many hundreds of hours would be required to compile all this data. However, it has all been worth it, since it has already come in handy for treating many of my own institution’s cases.
I find as a busy zoo clinician that I often don’t have the time or access to find drug doses used in every species or track down the original paper citing such a dose. As such, like many of you, I have to extrapolate from domestic animals.
To answer this need, I compiled data from textbooks, peer‐reviewed literature, relevant proceedings and personal communications. Wherever able I indicated how many animals and in what capacity the drug was used. I wanted to provide you as a clinician with as much confidence as possible when treating your cases. This is with the acknowledgement, however, that the literature available for some species is limited to n = 1 case reports. In addition, I prevailed upon the generosity of my esteemed colleagues for editing data and contributing doses that have been successful for them. Average weights for relevant species are also listed at the end of each chapter.
I included images of White‐bellied tree pangolins on the cover of this formulary. This was an effort to highlight that pangolins are the most trafficked species in the world. Over one million have been killed in recent years for their scales and meat, and they are thus critically endangered. I am thankful to be a part of the US Pangolin Consortium and for the opportunity to work with this amazing species. I hope that increased awareness of their plight and the hard work of many people with in‐situ research and rehabilitation, combined with research and support in captive collections, will help this imperiled animal.
I hope to continue with further editions of this formulary and welcome any constructive criticism for improvement or ideas for including additional data in the future.
In the end, I hope this formulary will be helpful for you and your patients!
This book would not have been possible without the support of my husband, family, friends and colleagues. Jennifer Hicks, you are a creative genius, and I so appreciate all of your help and ideas! I want to thank Paul Selvaggio for the use of his amazing pangolin photographs. Also, thank you very much to my co‐editors and contributors. I really appreciate you devoting your precious time to these chapters! And finally, thank you to Wiley‐Blackwell and my publishing team for your support and having faith in me and my idea.
Elizabeth Arnett‐Chin, DVM
Staff Veterinarian
Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens, Naples, FL, USA
Anne Burgdorf‐Moisuk, DVM, DACZM
Director of Animal Health
Great Plains Zoo and Delbridge Museum of Natural History, Sioux Falls, SD, USA
A. Margarita Woc Colburn, DVM
Associate Veterinarian
Nashville Zoo at Grassmere, Nashville, TN, USA
Gretchen A. Cole, DVM, DACZM, ECZM (ZHM)
Associate Veterinarian
Oklahoma City Zoo and Botanical Garden, Oklahoma City, OK, USA
Shannon Cerveny, DVM, DACZM
Staff Veterinarian
St. Louis Zoo, St Louis, MO, USA
Jennifer D'Agostino, DVM, DACZM
Director of Veterinary Services
Oklahoma City Zoo and Botanical Garden, Oklahoma City, OK, USA
Michelle Davis, DVM, DACZM, DECZM (ZHM)
Senior Veterinarian & Clinical Residency Coordinator
Georgia Aquarium, Atlanta, GA, USA
Gabriella L. Flacke, DVM, MVSc, PhD
Associate Veterinarian
Zoo Miami, Department of Animal Health, Miami, FL, USA
Amanda Guthrie, DVM, DACZM, DECZM
Senior Veterinary Officer
ZSL London Zoo, London, UK
Elizabeth E. Hammond, DVM, DACZM, DECZM (ZHM)
Senior Veterinarian
Lion Country Safari, Loxahatchee, FL, USA
James G. Johnson III, DVM, MS, CertAqV, DACZM
Associate Veterinarian
Zoo Miami, Miami, FL, USA
Jennifer Kilburn, DVM
Associate Veterinarian
Tulsa Zoo, Tulsa, OK, USA
R. Scott Larsen, DVM, MS, DACZM
Vice President of Veterinary Medicine
Denver Zoo, Denver, CO, USA
Michele A. Miller, DVM, MPH, PhD, DECZM (ZHM)
National Research Foundation South African Research Chair in Animal TB, Cape Town, South Africa
DST/NRF Centre of Excellence for Biomedical Tuberculosis Research, Cape Town, South Africa
SAMRC Centre for Molecular and Cellular Biology, Division of Molecular Biology and Human Genetics, Cape Town, South Africa
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa
Adrian Mutlow, MA, VetMB, MSc, MRCVS
Clinical Veterinarian
San Francisco Zoological Society, San Francisco, CA, USA
Hendrik Nollens, DVM, MSc, PhD
Vice President of Animal Health
SeaWorld Parks, Orlando, FL, USA
Luis R. Padilla, DVM, DACZM
Director of Animal Health
St. Louis Zoo, St Louis, MO, USA
Kristen Phair, DVM, DACZM
Associate Veterinarian
Phoenix Zoo, Phoenix, AZ, USA
Kimberly L. Rainwater, DVM
Associate Veterinarian
Fort Worth Zoo, Fort Worth, TX, USA
Rodney Schnellbacher, DVM, DACZM
Staff Veterinarian, Animal Health
Dickerson Park Zoo, Springfield, MO, USA
Ginger Sturgeon, DVM
Director of Animal Health
Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Julie Swenson, DVM, DACZM
Associate Veterinarian
Fossil Rim Wildlife Center, Glen Rose, TX, USA
Allison D. Tuttle, DVM, DACZM
Vice President of Biological Programs
Mystic Aquarium, Mystic, CT, USA
Trevor T. Zachariah, DVM, MS, DACZM
Director of Veterinary Programs
Brevard Zoo Sea Turtle Healing Center, Melbourne, FL, USA
Drug name | Drug dose | Species | Comments |
Antimicrobials and Antifungals | |||
Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid | 20 mg/kg IM SID or PO BID [1] | Echidnas | |
12.5 mg/kg IM SID [2] | Platypus | ||
Amphotericin B | 0.5 mg/kg injected intralesionally twice weekly [3] | Platypus | For ulcerative mycosis of Mucor amphibiorum. |
Ceftazidime | 65 mg/kg IM SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Doxycycline | 5 mg/kg PO SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Enrofloxacin | 5 mg/kg SC or PO SID [1] | Echidnas | |
5 mg/kg IM SID [1] | Platypus | ||
Itraconazole | 5 mg/kg PO SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Metronidazole | 20 mg/kg IV SC PO SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Nystatin | 10 000 IU/kg BID [1] | Echidnas | |
Ointment applied topically [1] | Echidnas | ||
Oxytetracycline | 20 mg/kg IM SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Penicillin with benzathine | 10 mg/kg IM SC SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Procaine penicillin | 15 mg/kg IM, SC SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Trimethoprim sulfadiazine | 5 mg/kg IM SID [1, 2] | Echidnas and Platypus | |
Analgesic | |||
Buprenorphine | 1 mg/kg IV IM SID [1] | Echidnas | Analgesia |
Butorphanol | 0.1 mg/kg IV IM BID [1] | Echidnas | |
Flunixin meglumine | 0.5 mg/kg IM SC IV SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Ketoprofen | 1 mg/kg IV IM SC SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Meloxicam | 0.2 mg/kg SC or PO SID [1] | Echidnas | |
0.5 IV mg/kg SC SID [1] | Echidnas | ||
Anesthetic | |||
Atipamezole HCl | 0.5 mg/kg IM [1] | Echidnas | |
Diazepam | 1–5 mg/kg IM [1] | Echidnas | Sedation |
0.5–1.0 mg/kg IM [2] | Platypus | Sedation for minor procedures. | |
Ether | Mask induction [4] | Platypus | n = 2 wild caught animals briefly anesthetized for transponder placement and blood draw to analyze blood sample appeared to induce leukocytosis. |
Isoflurane | Mask induction [2] | Platypus | Rarely have injectables been used, rather induction with a face mask via isoflurane is usually employed. |
Ketamine + medetomidine | K: 5 mg/kg + M: 0.5 mg/kg IM, antagonize with 2.5 mg/kg atipamezole [1, 3, 5] | Echidnas | |
K: 5 mg/kg + M: 0.3 mg/kg IM [1] | Echidnas | ||
Ketamine + xylazine | K: 5–10 mg/kg + X: 1–2 mg/kg IM, antagonize with 0.1 mg/kg yohimbine IV [1, 3, 5] | Echidnas | |
Pentobarbitol | 200 mg/kg IV [6] | Echidnas | Euthanasia. |
Telazol | 3–10 mg/kg IM [1] | Echidnas | |
Antiparasitic | |||
Fipronil | 10 mg/kg Topical, once [1] | Echidnas | |
Ivermectin | 0.2 mg/kg SC [1, 2] | Echidnas and Platypus | To treat acariasis. |
Moxidectin | 0.2 mg/kg IM SC q7d[1] | Echidnas | |
Praziquantel | 5 mg/kg IM PO once [1] | Echidnas | |
Selamectin | Topical application [3] | Echidnas | To treat acariasis. |
Toltrazuril | 20 mg/kg PO SID × 2d [1, 3] | Echidnas | To treat coccidiosis. |
Other | |||
Bromhexine HCl | 1 mg/kg PO TID [1] | Echidnas | To use as a mucolytic. |
Dexamethasone | 0.2 mg/kg IM SC SID [1] | Echidnas | |
Formic acid | 2% in food at 2% [1] | Echidnas | |
Phytomenadione | 0.1 mg/kg PO [1] | Echidnas |
Species | Weights | |
Echidna (Tachyglosss aculeatus) | 2.5–6 kg | |
Duck‐billed platypus (Orinthorynchus anatinus) | 0.2–2 kg |