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Three Pathogens in Sympatric Populations of Pumas, Bobcats, and Domestic Cats: Implications for Infectious Disease Transmission

Anthropogenic landscape change can lead to increased opportunities for pathogen transmission between domestic and non-domestic animals. Pumas, bobcats, and domestic cats are sympatric in many areas of North America and share many of the same pathogens, some of which are zoonotic. We analyzed bobcat,...

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Autores principales: Bevins, Sarah N., Carver, Scott, Boydston, Erin E., Lyren, Lisa M., Alldredge, Mat, Logan, Kenneth A., Riley, Seth P. D., Fisher, Robert N., Vickers, T. Winston, Boyce, Walter, Salman, Mo, Lappin, Michael R., Crooks, Kevin R., VandeWoude, Sue
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3275583/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22347471
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031403
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author Bevins, Sarah N.
Carver, Scott
Boydston, Erin E.
Lyren, Lisa M.
Alldredge, Mat
Logan, Kenneth A.
Riley, Seth P. D.
Fisher, Robert N.
Vickers, T. Winston
Boyce, Walter
Salman, Mo
Lappin, Michael R.
Crooks, Kevin R.
VandeWoude, Sue
author_facet Bevins, Sarah N.
Carver, Scott
Boydston, Erin E.
Lyren, Lisa M.
Alldredge, Mat
Logan, Kenneth A.
Riley, Seth P. D.
Fisher, Robert N.
Vickers, T. Winston
Boyce, Walter
Salman, Mo
Lappin, Michael R.
Crooks, Kevin R.
VandeWoude, Sue
author_sort Bevins, Sarah N.
collection PubMed
description Anthropogenic landscape change can lead to increased opportunities for pathogen transmission between domestic and non-domestic animals. Pumas, bobcats, and domestic cats are sympatric in many areas of North America and share many of the same pathogens, some of which are zoonotic. We analyzed bobcat, puma, and feral domestic cat samples collected from targeted geographic areas. We examined exposure to three pathogens that are taxonomically diverse (bacterial, protozoal, viral), that incorporate multiple transmission strategies (vector-borne, environmental exposure/ingestion, and direct contact), and that vary in species-specificity. Bartonella spp., Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV), and Toxoplasma gondii IgG were detected in all three species with mean respective prevalence as follows: puma 16%, 41% and 75%; bobcat 31%, 22% and 43%; domestic cat 45%, 10% and 1%. Bartonella spp. were highly prevalent among domestic cats in Southern California compared to other cohort groups. Feline Immunodeficiency Virus exposure was primarily associated with species and age, and was not influenced by geographic location. Pumas were more likely to be infected with FIV than bobcats, with domestic cats having the lowest infection rate. Toxoplasma gondii seroprevalence was high in both pumas and bobcats across all sites; in contrast, few domestic cats were seropositive, despite the fact that feral, free ranging domestic cats were targeted in this study. Interestingly, a directly transmitted species-specific disease (FIV) was not associated with geographic location, while exposure to indirectly transmitted diseases – vector-borne for Bartonella spp. and ingestion of oocysts via infected prey or environmental exposure for T. gondii – varied significantly by site. Pathogens transmitted by direct contact may be more dependent upon individual behaviors and intra-specific encounters. Future studies will integrate host density, as well as landscape features, to better understand the mechanisms driving disease exposure and to predict zones of cross-species pathogen transmission among wild and domestic felids.
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spelling pubmed-32755832012-02-15 Three Pathogens in Sympatric Populations of Pumas, Bobcats, and Domestic Cats: Implications for Infectious Disease Transmission Bevins, Sarah N. Carver, Scott Boydston, Erin E. Lyren, Lisa M. Alldredge, Mat Logan, Kenneth A. Riley, Seth P. D. Fisher, Robert N. Vickers, T. Winston Boyce, Walter Salman, Mo Lappin, Michael R. Crooks, Kevin R. VandeWoude, Sue PLoS One Research Article Anthropogenic landscape change can lead to increased opportunities for pathogen transmission between domestic and non-domestic animals. Pumas, bobcats, and domestic cats are sympatric in many areas of North America and share many of the same pathogens, some of which are zoonotic. We analyzed bobcat, puma, and feral domestic cat samples collected from targeted geographic areas. We examined exposure to three pathogens that are taxonomically diverse (bacterial, protozoal, viral), that incorporate multiple transmission strategies (vector-borne, environmental exposure/ingestion, and direct contact), and that vary in species-specificity. Bartonella spp., Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV), and Toxoplasma gondii IgG were detected in all three species with mean respective prevalence as follows: puma 16%, 41% and 75%; bobcat 31%, 22% and 43%; domestic cat 45%, 10% and 1%. Bartonella spp. were highly prevalent among domestic cats in Southern California compared to other cohort groups. Feline Immunodeficiency Virus exposure was primarily associated with species and age, and was not influenced by geographic location. Pumas were more likely to be infected with FIV than bobcats, with domestic cats having the lowest infection rate. Toxoplasma gondii seroprevalence was high in both pumas and bobcats across all sites; in contrast, few domestic cats were seropositive, despite the fact that feral, free ranging domestic cats were targeted in this study. Interestingly, a directly transmitted species-specific disease (FIV) was not associated with geographic location, while exposure to indirectly transmitted diseases – vector-borne for Bartonella spp. and ingestion of oocysts via infected prey or environmental exposure for T. gondii – varied significantly by site. Pathogens transmitted by direct contact may be more dependent upon individual behaviors and intra-specific encounters. Future studies will integrate host density, as well as landscape features, to better understand the mechanisms driving disease exposure and to predict zones of cross-species pathogen transmission among wild and domestic felids. Public Library of Science 2012-02-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3275583/ /pubmed/22347471 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031403 Text en This is an open-access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bevins, Sarah N.
Carver, Scott
Boydston, Erin E.
Lyren, Lisa M.
Alldredge, Mat
Logan, Kenneth A.
Riley, Seth P. D.
Fisher, Robert N.
Vickers, T. Winston
Boyce, Walter
Salman, Mo
Lappin, Michael R.
Crooks, Kevin R.
VandeWoude, Sue
Three Pathogens in Sympatric Populations of Pumas, Bobcats, and Domestic Cats: Implications for Infectious Disease Transmission
title Three Pathogens in Sympatric Populations of Pumas, Bobcats, and Domestic Cats: Implications for Infectious Disease Transmission
title_full Three Pathogens in Sympatric Populations of Pumas, Bobcats, and Domestic Cats: Implications for Infectious Disease Transmission
title_fullStr Three Pathogens in Sympatric Populations of Pumas, Bobcats, and Domestic Cats: Implications for Infectious Disease Transmission
title_full_unstemmed Three Pathogens in Sympatric Populations of Pumas, Bobcats, and Domestic Cats: Implications for Infectious Disease Transmission
title_short Three Pathogens in Sympatric Populations of Pumas, Bobcats, and Domestic Cats: Implications for Infectious Disease Transmission
title_sort three pathogens in sympatric populations of pumas, bobcats, and domestic cats: implications for infectious disease transmission
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3275583/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22347471
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031403
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