A koala affected by bushfires is released back into native bushland on February 21, 2020, following treatment at the Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park in Parndana, Australia.
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Researchers from the University of the Sunshine Coast spent more than 10 years developing a single-dose vaccine to protect the famed Australian marsupial from the effects of chlamydia, which include urinary tract infections, infertility, blindness and death, the university said in a statement on Wednesday.

Chlamydia is responsible for half of koala deaths in the country’s wild populations, which are predominantly found in the eucalyptus forests along Australia’s eastern coast.

A koala affected by bushfires is released back into native bushland on February 21, 2020, following treatment at the Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park in Parndana, Australia.
A koala affected by bushfires is released back into native bushland on February 21, 2020, following treatment at the Kangaroo Island Wildlife Park in Parndana, Australia. (Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images via CNN Newsource)

“Some individual colonies are edging closer to local extinction every day, particularly in South East Queensland and New South Wales, where infection rates within populations are often around 50 per cent and in some cases can reach as high as 70 per cent,” Peter Timms, professor of microbiology at UniSC’s Centre for Bioinnovation, said in a statement.

Often used as an emblem of Australian culture, the fluffy gray marsupials can only be found in Australia, and are considered endangered in Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory.

Aside from disease, the creatures are vulnerable to habitat loss, animal attacks and being hit by cars, and were named critically endangered in 2022, according to Australia’s World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

They are also often victims of the deadly bushfires that have ravaged Australia in its summer months in recent years.

Antibiotics were previously used to treat chlamydia in koalas, but the drugs often interfere with their ability to digest their staple diet of eucalyptus leaves, causing them to starve to death.

Now approved by the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority for production and widespread use, in a what researchers describe as a “world first,” the chlamydia vaccine has already been trialed on hundreds of wild and captive koalas, according to UniSC, which noted it had already been tested across multiple generations of the animal in a study published last year.

“This study found that the vaccine reduced the likelihood of koalas developing symptoms of chlamydia during breeding age and decreased mortality from the disease in wild populations by at least 65 per cent,” said researcher Sam Phillips, who led the study, which was the largest and longest study of wild koalas.

“It’s based on Chlamydia pecorum’s major outer membrane protein (MOMP), and offers three levels of protection — reducing infection, preventing progression to clinical disease and, in some cases, reversing existing symptoms,” he added.

In humans, chlamydia is a bacterial sexually transmitted infection that can cause infertility if left untreated.

The disease spreads in koala populations through reproduction and social behavior connected to mating. In addition, baby koalas — known as joeys — can catch the disease from their mothers.

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