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From beaver rescue to big screen: ¹ś²śĀé¶¹AV scientist’s work informs new movie ā€˜Hoppers’

From beaver rescue to big screen: ¹ś²śĀé¶¹AV scientist’s work informs new movie ā€˜Hoppers’

holly muraco standing at Pixar's Hoppers premier
Mississippi State scientist Holley Muraco visits Pixar Studios for the ā€˜Hoppers’ world premiere after serving as an educational consultant for the recent animated film. (Photo submitted)

Contact: Meg Henderson

STARKVILLE, Miss.—When Pixar came calling for help bringing beavers to life in its new animated film ā€œHoppers,ā€ Mississippi State scientist Holley Muraco was ready.

Muraco, an assistant research professor with ¹ś²śĀé¶¹AV’s Department of Animal and Dairy Sciences at the Coastal Research and Extension Center in Biloxi, was invited to Pixar as an educational consultant after her hands-on work rehabilitating a rescued North American beaver named Tulip gained widespread attention.

ā€œā€˜Hoppers’ has sparked a lot of interest in beavers, and it’s been a privilege collaborating with Pixar on their educational initiatives around the movie,ā€ she said of the film released this past month. ā€œIt’s a fun, funny movie for all ages, and it has a great environmental message about human and animal co-existence.ā€

beaver in a onesie
Recovering and feeling better, Tulip, is shown wearing a preemie baby onesie used to protect her fragile skin during treatment. (Photo submitted)

Tulip’s story began three years ago when Muraco took in the stranded five-month-old kit. Though the symptoms took a few weeks to emerge, Tulip had contracted a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection, most likely from the site where she was found.

ā€œTulip was my first rescue beaver. I went to the literature, but I didn’t find much information outside of trapping and processing,ā€ said Muraco, who is also a scientist in the university’s Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station. ā€œWe don’t know much about beaver husbandry, veterinary medicine or behavior, so that initially sparked my interest in the species.ā€

Weeks after her arrival at Muraco’s facility, a severe skin infection appeared on Tulip’s upper back. It was caused by Acinetobacter baumannii, a bacterium normally found in hospitals and resistant to most antibiotics. The infection quickly led to necrotizing fasciitis, a dangerous flesh-eating condition, and critical illness–related corticosteroid insufficiency, or CIRCI, meaning Tulip wasn’t producing enough stress hormones to fight the infection.

Ā Without other cases to consult, Muraco devised a novel combination of therapeutic interventions. She consulted with Dr. Tom Reidarson, a world-renowned wildlife veterinarian and ¹ś²śĀé¶¹AV adjunct faculty, who helped her and the team at Gulf Coast Veterinary Emergency Hospital navigate the delicate balance of scaling manatee medicine to beavers.

ā€œManatees, like beavers, are hindgut fermenters, meaning an enlarged hindgut digests plant material through microbial fermentation,ā€ Reidarson said. ā€œOnly certain antibiotics can be used safely because if you change the microflora in the hindgut, it affects their ability to ferment and makes them sicker. We don’t have a specific drug for beavers, but we could scale down the manatee drug.ā€

Tulip underwent surgery to remove the dead tissue. During her three-month recovery, she received prednisone to address the CIRCI, topical treatments, anti-inflammatories and light-based therapies to promote healing. A cotton infant bodysuit protected the wounds.

Now fully recovered, Tulip has become a social media sensation, drawing more than 140,000 followers. Likewise, Muraco has also gained acclaim for her work with rehabilitated beavers and other animals.

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