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Researchers work to find remedy for bighorn sheep disease: Penticton Indian Band

The bighorn sheep population has been on the decline
screenshot-2025-08-18-at-92623-am
yili虂k史lxkn (bighorn sheep) eat feed at a sheep pen on Penticton Indian Band land in syilx territory on July 9. The sheep pen is the hub of a 12-to-18-month-long research project dedicated to developing a drug for treating a life-threatening skin disease impacting the sheep population in the region.

 

Researchers in the Okanagan are working to find a treatment for a skin disease in yil铆k史lxkn (bighorn sheep), as the animal鈥檚 population has been decimated in the region over the past two decades.

A sheep pen at Penticton Indian Band (PIB) is the hub of a 12-to-18-month-long research project dedicated to developing a drug for treating Psoroptic mange.

The life-threatening skin condition has resulted in 鈥渓arge scale die-offs鈥 when it was introduced to the yil铆k史lxkn population in syilx territories around 20 years ago, explained Mackenzie Clarke, a senior tmix史 (wildlife) biologist with the Okanagan Nation Alliance (ONA).

鈥淭here was some really severe mange being seen in the population,鈥 said Clarke.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e had it for a number of years now, but we鈥檙e still seeing that the population has been reduced by about 60 to 70 per cent. They鈥檙e not really growing as much as you鈥檇 like them to. The population numbers are kind of stagnated.鈥

According to Clarke, there are 700 bighorn sheep across the Okanagan Valley in syilx homelands. 

In the west side of the valley, there鈥檚 a herd of 270 to 300 sheep grappling with the mange disease, which was likely passed onto them through rabbits. On the east side, there are sheep populations infected with a type of pneumonia called mycoplasma ovipneumoniae 鈥 鈥渕ovi鈥 for short 鈥 which come from domestic sheep and goats. 

鈥淭hat鈥檚 kind of the two main disease issues we have at the moment,鈥 Clarke said. 鈥淏oth of these two diseases are human-introduced, unfortunately.鈥

There are nearly 40 sheep 鈥 a mix of ewes (female sheep) and their lambs 鈥 housed at the sheep pen on PIB land, all infected with mange at varying severities.

The disease is characterized by tiny mites that live on the sheep鈥檚 skin. , where they feed off its skin and result in scabs, inflammation, hair loss and more.

鈥淭heir hair doesn鈥檛 look very good; their skin condition isn鈥檛 very good. They get a lot of scabbing, hair loss. They get these scabs in their ears where they can鈥檛 hear very well,鈥 Clarke said of the sheep.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e kind of at risk for predation a bit more, or we鈥檙e seeing them get hit by cars, because they can鈥檛 hear very well, with all these scabs from the mange.鈥

Right now, the focus of the sheep pen鈥檚 research is to develop a drug for the mange, not for movi. 

They are looking for a drug 鈥 or drugs 鈥 that would offer longer periods of protection: clearing the mite infestation, and seeing how long the treatment protects them for.

鈥淵ou give them the drug. After a certain time of months, you introduce some animals 鈥 that would still have mange, and you put them together with the animals that you treated. We鈥檙e trying to see how long does it take them to get mange from those animals that had it, again,鈥 said Clarke.

鈥淚f we treat them with one drug, does it protect them for six months from getting sick again? That gives us a good estimate of how long we have to actually administer that drug out on the land for the populations.鈥

Led by the syilx Nation, the research project has seen , following provincial funding restraints . A number of provincial, regional biologists and even a mange expert from the United Kingdom are also supporting the project, which was  at PIB in October of last year.

鈥淭his project has been so huge, that it wouldn鈥檛 have gotten off the ground without everybody working together like they have been,鈥 Clarke said.

鈥淭his project is a good example of everybody collaborating together for a common cause, because it鈥檚 been such a big undertaking. It shows that if we keep doing that, we can accomplish a lot more.鈥

Water, Land and Resource Stewardship Minister Randene Neill visited the territory and toured the sheep pen site . 

During the visit, Minister Neill observed the sheep feeding at the pen, which is a large, open, fenced-off area located on a hillside above the PIB community 鈥 not far from the animals鈥 natural habitat. Joining her were PIB Chief Greg Gabriel, ONA staff and members of the Wild Sheep Society. 

The sheep were timid during the visit 鈥 any movement from humans startled them and interrupted their feeding time. They ran up and down the sloping hill, going between their sheltering quarters and the feeding site. 

鈥淚t was good for (Minister Neill) to come out and see that everybody is trying to work together on something like this 鈥 provincial staff; all the NGOs; the bands; ONA,鈥 said Clarke.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a really good example of a collaborative project and how we can try and get more done if we鈥檙e all doing it together.鈥

, the ministry had cut funding to provincial wildlife and biodiversity programs, which included the bighorn sheep disease monitoring in the Okanagan region.

The ONA acknowledged the funding woes, saying they 鈥渃ertainly will not allow a lack of provincial support to 鈥榗ancel鈥 the bighorn programs.鈥 

鈥淭hese circumstances, in the ONA鈥檚 view, only add pressure to B.C. to advance co-management agreements, and acknowledge and recognize the syilx Okanagan Nation鈥檚 responsibilities for wildlife,鈥 ONA  released shortly after the budget constraints were revealed.

Jordan Coble, the chairman for ONA鈥檚 Natural Resource Committee, said in the same statement that bighorn sheep are 鈥渁 relative with whom we have shared tmx史ulax史 (land) and resources for thousands of years.鈥

鈥淭here is an inextinguishable responsibility to care for the land and the tmixw (all living creatures), including bighorn sheep,鈥 .

The sheep are found in mixed areas throughout the Okanagan, Clarke said, particularly in steeper, cliff areas in the southern-part of the territory.

鈥淭hey usually like areas that are close to escape terrains, so areas close to a steep area where they can run away,鈥 Clarke said.

Though once an important food source, Clarke said that syilx Nation members rarely hunt and harvest the sheep anymore, because of diseases and the population鈥檚 fragility.

She said that 鈥渋t鈥檚 a concern鈥 that nation members can no longer have access to harvesting sheep like they historically used to.

鈥淭here鈥檚 concern of the health of the land and the ecosystem 鈥 usually when the animals are sick, that means that there鈥檚 a larger issue going on as well,鈥 said Clarke.

Clinical trials

The clinical trials began in February, and are building on the work of a similar clinical drug trial for mange that began in 2016 and concluded one year later.

That first trial found success in trying different drugs, Clarke said, noting that a tagged sheep who had been administered treatment and released back into the wild was later found to have their ears and coat in much better condition.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 been able to examine that on a more research scale, but visually looking at it, they seemed in better condition. There does seem like there is some sort of residual effect from the drug from years ago,鈥 she said.

鈥淭hey did find some success with that trial, which is good. They just kind of ran out of time.鈥

In this set of clinical trials, there are two different drugs being tested, as well as a combination of the two, she said.

鈥淚 think we have a pretty good chance of actually finding something that鈥檒l work,鈥 said Clarke.

鈥淲hichever one works, we鈥檒l give it to all of the sheep again, and we鈥檒l let them all go back where they came from.鈥

The reason why research into treating the mange is the focus instead of the movi is because 鈥渋f one sheep has (the mange), they all have it,鈥 she said.

鈥淲ith the pneumonia, the only thing you can really do is called a test and remove,鈥 she said, which is the process of testing the sheep and removing them from the herd if their results come back positive.

鈥淯nfortunately, since some of them are carriers, you have to remove them from the population. If those ones are removed, there鈥檚 no one to really spread it around anymore,鈥 she said.

Once a treatment for the mange is found, Clarke said the focus will be finding a treatment for the movi.

鈥淲ith the pneumonia, we know where it is. We鈥檙e just leaving it alone right now,鈥 she said.

While the disease movement is somewhat slow, Clarke said that researchers are finding a treatment for mange now to avoid having the sheep get infected with both diseases at the same time in the future.

鈥淚 think it would hit their population pretty hard,鈥 she said.  鈥淚鈥檝e talked to some biologists down in the states, and they鈥檝e seen that when they have the movi and the mange at the same time, they had some really large die-offs in their sheep.鈥

Clarke said that researchers want to have a mange drug ready when more tests and removes are conducted in the future.

鈥淪o that we can give every sheep the mange drug anyways, just so that we鈥檙e saving the most amount of time and money that we can,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檒l just try and treat both diseases at the same time.鈥

There鈥檚 also the concern of the Okanagan sheep infected with the mange transferring the disease to herd populations in the 鈥淯nited States鈥 as they migrate, although Clarke noted that there are herds there who are already infected with the mange.

鈥淚t鈥檚 good if we figure out a drug, because other people can also use it as well in other places,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 been another big push for us to do this, so that other people can also use our research.鈥 

Bringing sheep home after numbers were depleted

, the mange is believed to be partially responsible for historic declines in bighorn sheep populations in the western 鈥淯nited States鈥 in the late 1800s and early 1900s. 

鈥淚t is still present, to varying degrees, in some U.S. bighorn populations,鈥 the province states. 

鈥淲e do not know how this disease came to the south Okanagan bighorns.鈥

Before the mass-infestations in the Okanagan, many of the sheep in the territory had been the source of sheep reintroductions in the 鈥淯.S.鈥

Recently, Clarke said that ONA has been contacted about bringing some of those sheep back home to the Okanagan.

鈥淪ome of those populations have been doing so well that they actually have too many sheep. They were wondering if we wanted sheep back,鈥 she said.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 something we鈥檙e starting to work on, is bringing the sheep home. We鈥檙e trying to coordinate with Oregon and Utah, to see if we can move some sheep back to the Okanagan.鈥

With sheep populations in the Okanagan having their numbers depleted due to diseases, Clarke said that it would be beneficial to bring the sheep back, once better disease treatments are in place.

In the future, the hope is to have a dedicated sheep program within the syilx Nation 鈥 for monitoring, disease work and habitat work.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 another reason why we鈥檙e trying to figure this stuff out right now,鈥 she said.