Smith A, Clark P, Averis S, Lymbery A J, Wayne A F, Morris K D, Thompson R C A
WHO Collaborating Centre for the Molecular Epidemiology of Parasitic Infections, State Agricultural Biotechnology Centre, School of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, Murdoch University, Western Australia 6150, Australia.
Parasitology. 2008 Sep;135(11):1329-35. doi: 10.1017/S0031182008004824. Epub 2008 Aug 28.
The brush-tailed bettong (Bettongia penicillata), or woylie, is a medium-sized macropod marsupial that has undergone a rapid and substantial decline throughout its home range in the Upper Warren region of Western Australia over a period of approximately 5 years. As part of an investigation into possible causes of the decline a morphologically distinct Trypanosoma sp. was discovered by light microscopy in the declining population but was absent in a stable population within the Karakamia Wildlife Sanctuary. Further investigations employing molecular methods targeting variations in the 18s rRNA gene determined that the trypanosome was novel and was also present within the Karakamia population albeit at a much lower overall prevalence and individual parasitaemia levels. Phylogenetic analysis suggests the novel Trypanosoma sp. to be closely related to other trypanosomes isolated from native Australian wildlife species. Although it appears unlikely that the parasite is solely responsible for the decline in woylie population size, it may (singularly or in conjunction with other infectious agents) predispose woylies to increased mortality.
帚尾袋狸(Bettongia penicillata),又称毛尾袋狸,是一种中等体型的有袋类有袋动物,在大约5年的时间里,其在西澳大利亚上沃伦地区的整个栖息地范围内数量迅速且大幅下降。作为对数量下降可能原因的调查的一部分,通过光学显微镜在数量下降的种群中发现了一种形态独特的锥虫属物种,但在卡拉卡米亚野生动物保护区的一个稳定种群中未发现。采用针对18s rRNA基因变异的分子方法进行的进一步调查确定,这种锥虫是新物种,在卡拉卡米亚种群中也有发现,尽管总体患病率和个体寄生虫血症水平要低得多。系统发育分析表明,这种新的锥虫属物种与从澳大利亚本土野生动物物种中分离出的其他锥虫密切相关。虽然这种寄生虫似乎不太可能是帚尾袋狸种群数量下降的唯一原因,但它可能(单独或与其他感染因子一起)使帚尾袋狸更容易死亡。