Faculty of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney, Camden, Australia.
PLoS One. 2012;7(10):e46310. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0046310. Epub 2012 Oct 5.
Infectious wildlife diseases have enormous global impacts, leading to human pandemics, global biodiversity declines and socio-economic hardship. Understanding how infection persists and is transmitted in wildlife is critical for managing diseases, but our understanding is limited. Our study aim was to better understand how infectious disease persists in wildlife populations by integrating genetics, ecology and epidemiology approaches. Specifically, we aimed to determine whether environmental or host factors were stronger drivers of Salmonella persistence or transmission within a remote and isolated wild pig (Sus scrofa) population. We determined the Salmonella infection status of wild pigs. Salmonella isolates were genotyped and a range of data was collected on putative risk factors for Salmonella transmission. We a priori identified several plausible biological hypotheses for Salmonella prevalence (cross sectional study design) versus transmission (molecular case series study design) and fit the data to these models. There were 543 wild pig Salmonella observations, sampled at 93 unique locations. Salmonella prevalence was 41% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 37-45%). The median Salmonella DICE coefficient (or Salmonella genetic similarity) was 52% (interquartile range [IQR]: 42-62%). Using the traditional cross sectional prevalence study design, the only supported model was based on the hypothesis that abundance of available ecological resources determines Salmonella prevalence in wild pigs. In the molecular study design, spatial proximity and herd membership as well as some individual risk factors (sex, condition score and relative density) determined transmission between pigs. Traditional cross sectional surveys and molecular epidemiological approaches are complementary and together can enhance understanding of disease ecology: abundance of ecological resources critical for wildlife influences Salmonella prevalence, whereas Salmonella transmission is driven by local spatial, social, density and individual factors, rather than resources. This enhanced understanding has implications for the control of diseases in wildlife populations. Attempts to manage wildlife disease using simplistic density approaches do not acknowledge the complexity of disease ecology.
传染性野生动物疾病具有巨大的全球影响,导致人类大流行、全球生物多样性下降和社会经济困难。了解感染如何在野生动物中持续存在并传播对于管理疾病至关重要,但我们的理解有限。我们的研究目的是通过整合遗传学、生态学和流行病学方法,更好地了解传染性疾病如何在野生动物种群中持续存在。具体来说,我们旨在确定环境因素还是宿主因素是导致偏远和孤立野猪(Sus scrofa)种群中沙门氏菌持续存在或传播的更强驱动力。我们确定了野猪的沙门氏菌感染状况。对沙门氏菌分离株进行了基因分型,并收集了一系列与沙门氏菌传播相关的潜在危险因素的数据。我们预先确定了几个合理的生物学假设,用于沙门氏菌流行(横断面研究设计)与传播(分子病例系列研究设计),并将数据拟合到这些模型中。共观察到 543 个野猪沙门氏菌样本,在 93 个独特位置采样。沙门氏菌流行率为 41%(95%置信区间 [CI]:37-45%)。沙门氏菌 DICE 系数(或沙门氏菌遗传相似性)的中位数为 52%(四分位距 [IQR]:42-62%)。使用传统的横断面流行率研究设计,唯一支持的模型是基于这样一种假设,即可用生态资源的丰度决定野猪中沙门氏菌的流行率。在分子研究设计中,空间接近度和群体成员身份以及一些个体危险因素(性别、状况评分和相对密度)决定了猪之间的传播。传统的横断面调查和分子流行病学方法是互补的,它们共同可以增强对疾病生态学的理解:对野生动物至关重要的生态资源的丰度影响沙门氏菌的流行率,而沙门氏菌的传播是由当地空间、社会、密度和个体因素驱动的,而不是资源。这种增强的理解对野生动物种群疾病的控制具有重要意义。使用简单的密度方法来管理野生动物疾病并不能认识到疾病生态学的复杂性。