Cargando…
Understanding the ecological drivers of avian influenza virus infection in wildfowl: a continental-scale study across Africa
Despite considerable effort for surveillance of wild birds for avian influenza viruses (AIVs), empirical investigations of ecological drivers of AIV prevalence in wild birds are still scarce. Here we used a continental-scale dataset, collected in tropical wetlands of 15 African countries, to test th...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Royal Society
2012
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3267134/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21920984 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2011.1417 |
_version_ | 1782222249389981696 |
---|---|
author | Gaidet, N. Caron, A. Cappelle, J. Cumming, G. S. Balança, G. Hammoumi, S. Cattoli, G. Abolnik, C. Servan de Almeida, R. Gil, P. Fereidouni, S. R. Grosbois, V. Tran, A. Mundava, J. Fofana, B. Ould El Mamy, A. B. Ndlovu, M. Mondain-Monval, J. Y. Triplet, P. Hagemeijer, W. Karesh, W. B. Newman, S. H. Dodman, T. |
author_facet | Gaidet, N. Caron, A. Cappelle, J. Cumming, G. S. Balança, G. Hammoumi, S. Cattoli, G. Abolnik, C. Servan de Almeida, R. Gil, P. Fereidouni, S. R. Grosbois, V. Tran, A. Mundava, J. Fofana, B. Ould El Mamy, A. B. Ndlovu, M. Mondain-Monval, J. Y. Triplet, P. Hagemeijer, W. Karesh, W. B. Newman, S. H. Dodman, T. |
author_sort | Gaidet, N. |
collection | PubMed |
description | Despite considerable effort for surveillance of wild birds for avian influenza viruses (AIVs), empirical investigations of ecological drivers of AIV prevalence in wild birds are still scarce. Here we used a continental-scale dataset, collected in tropical wetlands of 15 African countries, to test the relative roles of a range of ecological factors on patterns of AIV prevalence in wildfowl. Seasonal and geographical variations in prevalence were positively related to the local density of the wildfowl community and to the wintering period of Eurasian migratory birds in Africa. The predominant influence of wildfowl density with no influence of climatic conditions suggests, in contrast to temperate regions, a predominant role for inter-individual transmission rather than transmission via long-lived virus persisting in the environment. Higher prevalences were found in Anas species than in non-Anas species even when we account for differences in their foraging behaviour (primarily dabbling or not) or their geographical origin (Eurasian or Afro-tropical), suggesting the existence of intrinsic differences between wildfowl taxonomic groups in receptivity to infection. Birds were found infected as often in oropharyngeal as in cloacal samples, but rarely for both types of sample concurrently, indicating that both respiratory and digestive tracts may be important for AIV replication. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-3267134 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2012 |
publisher | The Royal Society |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-32671342012-01-30 Understanding the ecological drivers of avian influenza virus infection in wildfowl: a continental-scale study across Africa Gaidet, N. Caron, A. Cappelle, J. Cumming, G. S. Balança, G. Hammoumi, S. Cattoli, G. Abolnik, C. Servan de Almeida, R. Gil, P. Fereidouni, S. R. Grosbois, V. Tran, A. Mundava, J. Fofana, B. Ould El Mamy, A. B. Ndlovu, M. Mondain-Monval, J. Y. Triplet, P. Hagemeijer, W. Karesh, W. B. Newman, S. H. Dodman, T. Proc Biol Sci Research Articles Despite considerable effort for surveillance of wild birds for avian influenza viruses (AIVs), empirical investigations of ecological drivers of AIV prevalence in wild birds are still scarce. Here we used a continental-scale dataset, collected in tropical wetlands of 15 African countries, to test the relative roles of a range of ecological factors on patterns of AIV prevalence in wildfowl. Seasonal and geographical variations in prevalence were positively related to the local density of the wildfowl community and to the wintering period of Eurasian migratory birds in Africa. The predominant influence of wildfowl density with no influence of climatic conditions suggests, in contrast to temperate regions, a predominant role for inter-individual transmission rather than transmission via long-lived virus persisting in the environment. Higher prevalences were found in Anas species than in non-Anas species even when we account for differences in their foraging behaviour (primarily dabbling or not) or their geographical origin (Eurasian or Afro-tropical), suggesting the existence of intrinsic differences between wildfowl taxonomic groups in receptivity to infection. Birds were found infected as often in oropharyngeal as in cloacal samples, but rarely for both types of sample concurrently, indicating that both respiratory and digestive tracts may be important for AIV replication. The Royal Society 2012-03-22 2011-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3267134/ /pubmed/21920984 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2011.1417 Text en This journal is © 2011 The Royal Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Research Articles Gaidet, N. Caron, A. Cappelle, J. Cumming, G. S. Balança, G. Hammoumi, S. Cattoli, G. Abolnik, C. Servan de Almeida, R. Gil, P. Fereidouni, S. R. Grosbois, V. Tran, A. Mundava, J. Fofana, B. Ould El Mamy, A. B. Ndlovu, M. Mondain-Monval, J. Y. Triplet, P. Hagemeijer, W. Karesh, W. B. Newman, S. H. Dodman, T. Understanding the ecological drivers of avian influenza virus infection in wildfowl: a continental-scale study across Africa |
title | Understanding the ecological drivers of avian influenza virus infection in wildfowl: a continental-scale study across Africa |
title_full | Understanding the ecological drivers of avian influenza virus infection in wildfowl: a continental-scale study across Africa |
title_fullStr | Understanding the ecological drivers of avian influenza virus infection in wildfowl: a continental-scale study across Africa |
title_full_unstemmed | Understanding the ecological drivers of avian influenza virus infection in wildfowl: a continental-scale study across Africa |
title_short | Understanding the ecological drivers of avian influenza virus infection in wildfowl: a continental-scale study across Africa |
title_sort | understanding the ecological drivers of avian influenza virus infection in wildfowl: a continental-scale study across africa |
topic | Research Articles |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3267134/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21920984 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2011.1417 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT gaidetn understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT carona understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT cappellej understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT cumminggs understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT balancag understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT hammoumis understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT cattolig understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT abolnikc understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT servandealmeidar understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT gilp understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT fereidounisr understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT grosboisv understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT trana understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT mundavaj understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT fofanab understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT ouldelmamyab understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT ndlovum understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT mondainmonvaljy understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT tripletp understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT hagemeijerw understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT kareshwb understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT newmansh understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica AT dodmant understandingtheecologicaldriversofavianinfluenzavirusinfectioninwildfowlacontinentalscalestudyacrossafrica |