Er. Jacobson et al., CUTANEOUS DYSKERATOSIS IN FREE-RANGING DESERT TORTOISES, GOPHERUS-AGASSIZII, IN THE COLORADO DESERT OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, Journal of zoo and wildlife medicine, 25(1), 1994, pp. 68-81
High mortality rates and a shell disease originally described as shell
necrosis were observed in the population of desert tortoises (Gopheru
s agassizii) in the Colorado Desert on the Chuckwalla Bench Area of Cr
itical Environmental Concern, Riverside County, California, USA. In a
retrospective review of photographic slides of desert tortoises from t
he Chuckwalla Bench, the disease was evident in 1979 when tortoises on
a permanent study site were first photographed. Lesions were present
in both sexes and all size classes of tortoises in all years in which
tortoises were photographed. In those tortoises where sequential photo
graphs were taken, the most severe lesions were seen in 1988. Although
the disease was present on the carapace, plastron, and thickened fore
limb scutes, the plastron was more severely affected than other areas
of the integument. The affected portions of the shell were gray-white
and sometimes orange and had a roughened flaky appearance. The lesion
commenced at seams between scutes and spread toward the middle of each
scute in an irregular pattern. Shell biopsies of nine affected tortoi
ses were evaluated by light microscopy. No inflammatory infiltrates we
re present in the lesions, and although bacterial organisms were ident
ified in tissue sections, they were superficially located and were con
sidered to be secondary invaders. Special staining indicated a loss of
the normal integrity of the horny material covering affected scutes.
For the most part, the epithelial cells that formed a pseudostratified
layer under affected portions of each scute remained intact. Although
the location and histologic appearance of the lesion were compatible
with a dyskeratosis and were suggestive of either a deficiency disease
or toxicosis, the exact cause of the disease could not be determined.