Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
No more itchy business: Australia greenlights chlamydia jab for koalas to save the species

No more itchy business: Australia greenlights chlamydia jab for koalas to save the species

Posted on 10 September 2025 By jobuzo

SYDNEY, Sept 10 — A vaccine to protect Australia’s koalas against chlamydia has been approved for the first time, a move that scientists believe could stop the spread of the deadly disease that has ravaged populations of the beloved endangered marsupial.

The single-dose vaccine is now ready to be used nationally at wildlife hospitals, clinics and in the field.

Chlamydia, a sexually transmitted infection also found in humans, accounts for up to half of all koala deaths in the wild. It can also cause infertility and blindness.

“Some individual colonies are edging closer to local extinction every day,” Peter Timms, professor of microbiology at the University of the Sunshine Coast, said in a statement on Wednesday.

He noted that in some populations in the southeast of the state of Queensland and in the state of New South Wales, infection rates are often around 50 per cent and sometimes as high as 70 per cent.

The vaccine, which Timms’ team developed after more than a decade of research, could reduce the likelihood of koalas developing symptoms of chlamydia during breeding age and cut mortality among wild koalas by at least 65 per cent.

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

“It offers three levels of protection – reducing infection, preventing progression to clinical disease and, in some cases, reversing existing symptoms,” he said.

The Australian government has committed A$76 million (US$50 million) to saving koalas.

They were listed as endangered in 2022 in Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. Australia’s national koala monitoring program estimates that between 95,000 and 238,000 koalas are left in those areas.

Another 129,000 to 286,000 koalas are estimated to live in the states of Victoria and South Australia.

Koala numbers have halved in the past two decades due to infectious disease, habitat loss, climate change and bushfires, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature. (US$1 = 1.5152 Australian dollars) — Reuters

No more itchy business: Australia greenlights chlamydia jab for koalas to save the species


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: ‘Jaan wapas aa gaya’: Indian tourists return from Nepal as unrest spreads
Next Post: Russian drones over Poland are ‘dangerous precedent’ for Europe: Zelensky

Related Posts

HP’s New Gaming Headset Promises to Stay Powered From Now Until Judgement Day HP’s New Gaming Headset Promises to Stay Powered From Now Until Judgement Day News
First Look: The Toyota GR GT Supercar and GT3 Racer First Look: The Toyota GR GT Supercar and GT3 Racer News
Empty shops, boarded windows: Has Holland Village lost its mojo? Empty shops, boarded windows: Has Holland Village lost its mojo? News

Latest

  • Inside Ariana Grande’s World After Ethan Slater Breakup: How She’s Continuing to Spread Eternal Sunshine
  • The White House is asking OpenAI to slow roll the release of its new model over safety concerns
  • YouTube Shorts are getting even shorter with an update that lets you double the playback speed
  • Wang Yi highlights Austria’s role in China-Europe links
  • China keeps an eye on AI smart glasses as privacy concerns come into focus
  • Rescue race intensifies after Venezuela’s deadliest quakes in decades
  • Bafana Bafana stun South Korea to reach World Cup knockouts
  • Chinese, Austrian foreign ministers hold talks in Beijing
  • New wave of potent synthetic drugs drives rise in global drug use, says UN
  • JD Vance jokes about wife’s $8.75 maternity dress amid NYT row

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs