Your #1 source for blades and firearms news and updates…

  • Home
  • Knives
  • News
  • Hunting
  • Tactical
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
Subscribe
Font ResizerAa
Blade ShopperBlade Shopper
  • News
  • Knives
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Tactical
  • Hunting
  • Videos
Search
  • Home
  • Knives
  • News
  • Hunting
  • Tactical
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
banner
Create an Amazing Newspaper
Discover thousands of options, easy to customize layouts, one-click to import demo and much more.
Learn More

Stay Updated

Get the latest headlines, discounts for the military community, and guides to maximizing your benefits
Subscribe

Explore

  • Photo of The Day
  • Opinion
  • Today's Epaper
  • Trending News
  • Weekly Newsletter
  • Special Deals
Home » Aoudad in Texas Are Getting Pink Eye. The State’s Desert Bighorns Are Safe — For Now

Aoudad in Texas Are Getting Pink Eye. The State’s Desert Bighorns Are Safe — For Now

Adam Green By Adam Green February 21, 2026 6 Min Read
Share
Aoudad in Texas Are Getting Pink Eye. The State’s Desert Bighorns Are Safe — For Now

Sign up for the Outdoor Life Newsletter

Get the hottest outdoor news—plus a free month of onX Hunt Elite.

Earlier this month, a hunter in Texas reported harvesting an aoudad to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. This is somewhat unusual, since the state does not require harvest reports for the non-native animals. As it turns out, something was wrong with the sheep’s eyes. Three other hunters had reported a similar problem over the past three months, and yet another aoudad — one euthanized by state officials in September — had a similar condition: swollen, cloudy eyes, and even blindness. Lab results just confirmed the culprit: pink eye.

Pink eye is caused by contagious bacteria and is fairly common among livestock. Now it’s spreading among some of the state’s aoudad, also known as Barbary sheep, with an estimated 25 sightings reported from state parks and private ranches. The bigger concern is that it could potentially infect Texas’ native desert bighorn sheep, especially at a time when the state’s herds are experiencing steep declines from pneumonia, which is also carried by aoudad. There’s good news, though.

An aoudad infected with pink eye. Photo courtesy TPWD

“This is not anything for anyone to panic about,” TPWD wildlife veterinarian Sara Wyckoff tells Outdoor Life. “The fact that we haven’t seen it in native sheep, even though we’ve been having aoudad cases for a couple of months, is a good thing. If it was really widespread and working its way around, we’d be seeing it in more animals. Somehow our bighorn sheep have been able to stay away from it.”

TPWD posted about the outbreak Thursday to raise public awareness, noting that officials have “not documented cases of [pink eye] in desert bighorn sheep and will continue to actively monitor our populations in west Texas.”

The affected area is a 30-mile stretch of West Texas that includes Jeff Davis, Presidio, and Brewster counties. Among livestock, pink eye, also known as infectious keratoconjunctivitis, or IKC, is often spread by flies. The more flies among animals, and the more animals in close proximity, the higher the risk of pink eye. Dust and other environmental factors can also be an issue.

“Flies can move the bacteria from one cow’s eye booger to another cow’s eye booger,” Wyckoff says. “The bacteria gets on the fly’s leg, then moves with them. That bacteria causes disease, but it is not fatal.”

While pink eye itself is not a fatal disease, it can cause poor vision or blindness, and a blind animal is more vulnerable. Of the few dozen pink eye cases reported in aoudad, some animals have been found dead due to apparent predation or roadkill. Research already shows aoudad and bighorn carry the same respiratory pathogens that can lead to crossover infections like pneumonia, and bacterial diseases can also pass between the two species.

A dead aoudad with pink eye.
A dead aoudad, with cloudy eyes from pink eye. Photo by TPWD

“This is a disease that’s just going to have to run its course,” says Wyckoff. In wildlife populations there is no available treatment. “With the calls we’re getting, we know the sheep are blind now, but we don’t know when they got infected.”

Texas imported aoudad, which are native to Northern Africa, as a game species in the 1950s. They have adapted well to the rugged and arid terrain of West Texas. Aoudad hunts on private land are popular and reasonably attainable, whereas hunting wild bighorn sheep is out of reach for most hunters. This is because there are WAY more aoudad than bighorns.

The Wild Sheep Foundation estimates there are 85,000 bighorn sheep in all of North America, but there are around 100,000 aoudad west of the Pecos River in Texas.

“Aoudad show up in just about every county in Texas these days so they’ve done extremely well. It is completely out of hand,” said Texas Bighorn Society vice president Sam Cunningham in a 2025 episode of the Wild Sheep Foundation podcast. “I’ve heard it described as compound interest. It rolled along pretty slow for years and years and then in the past decade or so it has just gone crazy.”

Read Next: South Florida’s Newest Invasive Threat Is a 6-Foot-Long Lizard from Africa

Aoudad females can breed twice a year and usually have twins. They’re outpacing native bighorn sheep ewes, which are about to lamb. Desert bighorn sheep in particular have declined by 50 percent in Texas since 2021. Most of the loss is due to pneumonia, which aoudad carry but don’t usually die from. Pneumonia is devastating to wild bighorns, with mortality rates ranging from 50 to 80 percent in infected sheep.

Read the full article here

Share This Article
Facebook X Copy Link Print
Previous Article DSC Celebrates Successful 2026 Convention in Atlanta DSC Celebrates Successful 2026 Convention in Atlanta
Next Article Musk Deepens Saudi Ties With  Billion AI Deal, Raising National Security Questions Musk Deepens Saudi Ties With $3 Billion AI Deal, Raising National Security Questions
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Wake up with our popular morning roundup of the day's top blades, firearms and survavial news and updates.

Florida AG Admits Error, Says Only Dangerous Felons Should Lose Gun Rights

February 21, 2026

Houston ‘Gun Jugging’ Thwarted: Armed Citizen Shoots Robber After Leaving Range

February 21, 2026

Minnesota Hearing Scheduled on Semi-Auto Ban and 10-Round Magazine Limit

February 21, 2026

Woman Shoots And Kills 15-Year-Old Suspect During 2:30AM Armed Break-In

February 21, 2026

VA Reverses Decades-Old Practice That Blocked Some Veterans From Firearm Ownership

February 21, 2026

You Might Also Like

Marcus Klemp and Nathalia Tobar Crowned Air Pistol Champions at 2025 USA Shooting Nationals

Marcus Klemp and Nathalia Tobar Crowned Air Pistol Champions at 2025 USA Shooting Nationals

Hunting
Statement from the Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies Commending Secretary Burgum’s Signing Secretarial Order 3342 

Statement from the Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies Commending Secretary Burgum’s Signing Secretarial Order 3342 

Hunting
Forget Glocks—These New Revolvers Are Taking Over in 2026!

Forget Glocks—These New Revolvers Are Taking Over in 2026!

Hunting
Trika 6X Rods Review | Outdoor Life

Trika 6X Rods Review | Outdoor Life

Hunting

2025 © Blade Shopper. All rights reserved.

Helpful Links

  • News
  • Knives
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Tactical
  • Hunting
  • Videos

Resources

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Popuplar

Florida AG Admits Error, Says Only Dangerous Felons Should Lose Gun Rights
16 Types of Military Helicopters Used By The US Military
Bournemouth Air Festival: The UK’s Largest Air Festival
We provide daily defense news, benefits information, veteran employment resources, spouse and family resources.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?