Vote for BP.Net for the 2013 Forum of the Year! Click here for more info.

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 1,208

2 members and 1,206 guests
Most users ever online was 6,337, 01-24-2020 at 04:30 AM.

» Today's Birthdays

None

» Stats

Members: 75,093
Threads: 248,533
Posts: 2,568,691
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, Amethyst42
Results 1 to 5 of 5
  1. #1
    BPnet Veteran George1994's Avatar
    Join Date
    01-27-2014
    Location
    London, England
    Posts
    772
    Thanks
    147
    Thanked 203 Times in 179 Posts
    Images: 9

    Ball Python Nidovirus - New Virus

    I am subscribed to a magazine called practical reptile keeping over here in the UK. This article was in this months issue. You guys heard much about it?











    Hopefully the pictures are in order.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    I own:
    1.0 Reduced Normal Ball Python [Peter]
    0.1 Harlequin Crestie [Amelia]

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    The other half owns:
    1.0 Orange Dalmatian Crestie [Archie]
    0.1 Golden Dalmatian Crestie [Banana]

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  2. The Following User Says Thank You to George1994 For This Useful Post:

    ladywhipple02 (10-29-2014)

  3. #2
    bcr229's Avatar
    Join Date
    03-18-2013
    Location
    Eastern WV Panhandle
    Posts
    9,502
    Thanks
    2,891
    Thanked 9,859 Times in 4,779 Posts
    Images: 34
    http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/foru...220629&page=11 - see post #106 if you don't want to read the whole thread.

  4. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to bcr229 For This Useful Post:

    George1994 (10-30-2014),Mr. Misha (10-29-2014)

  5. #3
    BPnet Senior Member Mr. Misha's Avatar
    Join Date
    10-16-2013
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,862
    Thanks
    514
    Thanked 926 Times in 657 Posts
    Images: 8

    Re: Ball Python Nidovirus - New Virus

    I was just about to post the same thing... I just read that whole thread because it was posted in a QT question thread.

    It was sad to read but i'm glad that through research they're finding something new about the disease.

    Here's the whole recap here:
    http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/foru...light=Harrison

    Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using Tapatalk
    Last edited by Mr. Misha; 10-29-2014 at 05:39 PM.
    0.1 Reg. BP Het. Albino (Faye),
    1.0 Albino BP (Henry),
    0.1 Pastave BP Het. Pied (Kira)
    1.0 Pied BP (Sam)
    1.0 Bumble Bee BP (Izzy)

  6. The Following User Says Thank You to Mr. Misha For This Useful Post:

    George1994 (10-30-2014)

  7. #4
    BPnet Veteran George1994's Avatar
    Join Date
    01-27-2014
    Location
    London, England
    Posts
    772
    Thanks
    147
    Thanked 203 Times in 179 Posts
    Images: 9

    Re: Ball Python Nidovirus - New Virus

    Thank you both for the extra reading. The more info the better. If you can't be bothered to read the post, quarantine is vital! Worth the read tho!
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    I own:
    1.0 Reduced Normal Ball Python [Peter]
    0.1 Harlequin Crestie [Amelia]

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    The other half owns:
    1.0 Orange Dalmatian Crestie [Archie]
    0.1 Golden Dalmatian Crestie [Banana]

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  8. #5
    BPnet Veteran George1994's Avatar
    Join Date
    01-27-2014
    Location
    London, England
    Posts
    772
    Thanks
    147
    Thanked 203 Times in 179 Posts
    Images: 9
    I was just reading the original post from that thread that bcr229 posted, and the effects of this disease sound awful! This next paragraph is copied over from that post, and it is extremely graphic to read at your own discretion.

    ---- Gore Warning ----

    Generally, the first sign is typical of any RI. Clear bubbling mucous, wheezing, drooling, lack of appetite. Then the mucous turns bright green, almost like the fluid inside a glowstick that has burned out, and intensifies, often showing smears all over the sides of the tub and the substrate. The wheezing gets worse, and the infection does not respond to ANY antibiotics whatsoever, nor any antivirals, even Interferon. Raising the heat does nothing. Then blood starts appearing within the mucous, and the snake's tissues swell around the upper body. The wheezing gets worse, and the snake begins to forcefully expel air/fluid from its lungs (almost like a cough, but snakes can't cough). The death usually comes at night when you are asleep, although I unfortunately had to witness two dying in front of me one evening. You go to check them in the morning, and you find them bloated, cloudy looking as if in shed, upside down and twisted into horrific shapes due to due to severe convulsions and the snake fighting to breathe, covered in blood that was expelled from the lungs, mouth, and nostrils. It is an excrutiating death for these animals to go through, and an image I will never get out of my head.

    ---- Gore Over ----

    This sounds so horrible I couldn't imagine seeing something like that! I am glad that progress is being made and these types of things are being researched! Hopefully some sort of medicine can be invented to help combat this virus!

    - Edit -

    http://derisilab.ucsf.edu/pdfs/mBio-2014-Stenglein-.pdf

    I believe this may be a scientific paper published on the subject, interesting read.
    Last edited by George1994; 10-30-2014 at 07:45 AM.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    I own:
    1.0 Reduced Normal Ball Python [Peter]
    0.1 Harlequin Crestie [Amelia]

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    The other half owns:
    1.0 Orange Dalmatian Crestie [Archie]
    0.1 Golden Dalmatian Crestie [Banana]

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.2.1