Updated On: 01 November, 2024 09:41 AM IST | Mumbai | Ranjeet Jadhav
Experts tell mid-day that such outbreaks can affect the already declining wildlife population

A total of five jackal deaths were reported from the Trombay-Chembur belt over the past month. Representation pic
As rabies infection in wild jackals around Mumbai was confirmed, mid-day spoke to wildlife veterinarians and conservationists to know what threats this poses to wild animals in general. Experts feel that domestic dogs could potentially function as key players in disease transmission in small and fragmented forest landscapes such as Mumbai, where they live in higher densities with increased encounters between the dogs themselves and wild carnivores.
On Wednesday, mid-day reported on how a jackal which died recently in Mumbai tested positive for rabies infection, making this incident probably the first case of a rabies-infected death of wildlife in Mumbai. Experienced wildlife veterinarian, Dr Shailesh Pethe said, “Domestic dogs are often known to act as ‘reservoir hosts’ for pathogens, harbouring diseases of concern from the conservation of critical wildlife point of view.