Hinton M G, Reisen W K, Wheeler S S, Townsend A K
Department of Wildlife, Fish, & Conservation Biology, University of California, Davis, 1088 Academic Surge, Davis, CA 95616.
Department of Pathology, Microbiology, & Immunology, University of California, Davis, Center for Vectorborne Diseases, Old Davis Road, Davis, CA 95616.
J Med Entomol. 2015 Jul;52(4):683-92. doi: 10.1093/jme/tjv040. Epub 2015 Apr 24.
Since its emergence in North America, West Nile virus (WNV) has had a large impact on equines, humans, and wild bird communities, yet gaps remain in our understanding of how the virus persists at temperate latitudes when winter temperatures preclude virus replication and host-seeking activity by mosquito vectors. Bird-to-bird transmission at large communal American Crow roosts could provide one mechanism for WNV persistence. Herein, we describe seasonal patterns of crow and Culex mosquito abundance, WNV infection rates, and the prevalence of WNV-positive fecal samples at a winter crow roost to test the hypothesis that bird-to-bird transmission allows WNV to persist at winter crow roosts. Samples were collected from large winter crow roosts in the Sacramento Valley of California from January 2013 until August 2014, encompassing two overwintering roost periods. West Nile virus RNA was detected in local crow carcasses in both summer [13/18 (72% WNV positive)] and winter [18/44 (41% WNV positive)] 2013-2014. Winter infections were unlikely to have arisen by recent bites from infected mosquitoes because Culex host-seeking activity was very low in winter and all Culex mosquitoes collected during winter months tested negative for WNV. Opportunities existed for fecal-oral transfer at the overwintering roost: most carcasses that tested positive for WNV had detectable viral RNA in both kidney and cloacal swabs, suggesting that infected crows were shedding virus in their feces, and >50% of crows at the roost were stained with feces by mid-winter. Moreover, 2.3% of fecal samples collected in late summer, when mosquitoes were active, tested positive for WNV RNA. Nevertheless, none of the 1,119 feces collected from three roosts over two winters contained detectable WNV RNA. This study provided evidence of WNV infection in overwintering American crows without mosquito vector activity, but did not elucidate a mechanism of WNV transmission during winter.
自西尼罗河病毒(WNV)在北美出现以来,它对马、人类和野生鸟类群落产生了重大影响。然而,当冬季气温使得病毒无法复制且蚊媒无法进行宿主搜寻活动时,我们对该病毒在温带地区如何持续存在的理解仍存在空白。在美国乌鸦大型群居栖息地中,鸟类之间的传播可能是WNV持续存在的一种机制。在此,我们描述了冬季乌鸦栖息地中乌鸦和库蚊的丰度季节性模式、WNV感染率以及WNV阳性粪便样本的流行情况,以检验鸟类之间传播使WNV在冬季乌鸦栖息地持续存在这一假设。样本于2013年1月至2014年8月从加利福尼亚州萨克拉门托山谷的大型冬季乌鸦栖息地采集,涵盖两个越冬栖息地时期。在2013 - 2014年的夏季[18只中有13只(72% WNV阳性)]和冬季[44只中有18只(41% WNV阳性)],均在当地乌鸦尸体中检测到了西尼罗河病毒RNA。冬季感染不太可能是近期被感染蚊子叮咬所致,因为冬季库蚊的宿主搜寻活动非常低,且在冬季采集的所有库蚊均检测为WNV阴性。在越冬栖息地存在粪口传播的机会:大多数检测为WNV阳性的尸体在肾脏和泄殖腔拭子中都能检测到病毒RNA,这表明受感染的乌鸦通过粪便排出病毒,并且到冬季中期,栖息地中超过50%的乌鸦被粪便污染。此外,在夏末蚊子活跃时采集的粪便样本中,有2.3%检测为WNV RNA阳性。然而,在两个冬季从三个栖息地采集的1119份粪便中,均未检测到可检测到的WNV RNA。这项研究提供了在没有蚊媒活动的情况下越冬美国乌鸦感染WNV的证据,但并未阐明冬季WNV的传播机制。