Pansteatitis
Pansteatitis, or yellow fat disease, is a physiological condition in which the body fat becomes inflamed.
Presentations
The condition has been found in cats, fish, herons, terrapins and Nile crocodiles, piscivores such as otters, cormorants, Pel's fishing-owls and fish eagles. The disorder is also regularly found in captive-bred animals fed on high fish diets, such as mink, pigs and poultry. It shows as a rubber-like hardening of fat reserves which then become unavailable for normal metabolism, resulting in extreme pain, loss of mobility and death.Causes
It is thought to be brought about by any or a combination of a number of factors which include:- Vitamin E deficiency
- Microcystin and nodularin poisoning, via inhibition of protein phosphatases
- Heavy metals and other fat-accumulated pollutants such as DDT, PCBs, PCDDs and brominated flame retardants
- Ingestion of affected animals
- Pathogens as yet unidentified
Incidents
The Massingir Dam in Mozambique, and just downstream of the Olifants Gorge, was constructed in the 1970s, but the country's civil war delayed installation of the sluice gates. The dam wall was raised and sluice gates installed in 2006, causing sediment to back up into the 8 km-long Olifants Gorge.