Seltmann Anne, Corman Victor M, Rasche Andrea, Drosten Christian, Czirják Gábor Á, Bernard Henry, Struebig Matthew J, Voigt Christian C
Department of Evolutionary Ecology, Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Alfred-Kowalke-Str. 17, 10315, Berlin, Germany.
Institute of Biology, Freie Universität Berlin, Takustr. 3, 14195, Berlin, Germany.
Ecohealth. 2017 Jun;14(2):272-284. doi: 10.1007/s10393-017-1245-x. Epub 2017 May 12.
Emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) are considered a major threat to global health. Most EIDs appear to result from increased contact between wildlife and humans, especially when humans encroach into formerly pristine habitats. Habitat deterioration may also negatively affect the physiology and health of wildlife species, which may eventually lead to a higher susceptibility to infectious agents and/or increased shedding of the pathogens causing EIDs. Bats are known to host viruses closely related to important EIDs. Here, we tested in a paleotropical forest with ongoing logging and fragmentation, whether habitat disturbance influences the occurrence of astro- and coronaviruses in eight bat species. In contrast to our hypothesis, anthropogenic habitat disturbance was not associated with corona- and astrovirus detection rates in fecal samples. However, we found that bats infected with either astro- or coronaviruses were likely to be coinfected with the respective other virus. Additionally, we identified two more risk factors influencing astrovirus shedding. First, the detection rate of astroviruses was higher at the beginning of the rainy compared to the dry season. Second, there was a trend that individuals with a poor body condition had a higher probability of shedding astroviruses in their feces. The identification of risk factors for increased viral shedding that may potentially result in increased interspecies transmission is important to prevent viral spillovers from bats to other animals, including humans.
新发传染病(EIDs)被认为是对全球健康的重大威胁。大多数新发传染病似乎是野生动物与人类接触增加的结果,尤其是当人类侵入以前未受破坏的栖息地时。栖息地退化也可能对野生动物物种的生理和健康产生负面影响,最终可能导致其对传染病原体的易感性增加和/或导致新发传染病的病原体传播增加。众所周知,蝙蝠携带与重要新发传染病密切相关的病毒。在此,我们在一个正在进行伐木和碎片化的古热带森林中测试了栖息地干扰是否会影响八种蝙蝠中星状病毒和冠状病毒的出现。与我们的假设相反,人为栖息地干扰与粪便样本中冠状病毒和星状病毒的检出率无关。然而,我们发现感染星状病毒或冠状病毒的蝙蝠可能会同时感染另一种病毒。此外,我们还确定了另外两个影响星状病毒排泄的风险因素。第一,与旱季相比,雨季开始时星状病毒的检出率更高。第二,有一个趋势是身体状况较差的个体粪便中排泄星状病毒的可能性更高。识别可能导致种间传播增加的病毒排泄增加的风险因素对于防止病毒从蝙蝠传播到包括人类在内的其他动物非常重要。