Kimble Steven J A, Johnson April J, Williams Rod N, Hoverman Jason T
Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, College of Agriculture, Purdue University, 715 West State Street, West Lafayette, IN, USA.
Department of Comparative Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Purdue University, 725 Harrison Street, West Lafayette, IN, USA.
Ecohealth. 2017 Dec;14(4):810-815. doi: 10.1007/s10393-017-1263-8. Epub 2017 Aug 1.
A Ranavirus outbreak in a captive population of wild-caught individuals was monitored using clinical evaluations and real-time PCR in 317 wild box turtles held in captivity during translocation. During the 2-year study period, the population experienced 71.6% mortality, suggesting that ranaviruses can rapidly attenuate populations. Wide variation in infection rate (7-94% per sampling period) was observed, which may have been driven by clearing and reinfection, adaptive immunity, or imperfect detection using noninvasive samples. Only nasal clinical signs were significantly related to infection status, and agreement among sample types was low. Subsequent to the initial outbreak, low mortality but high real-time PCR prevalence of Ranavirus was observed, suggesting that surviving individuals might be tolerant.
在317只野生捕获并在运输过程中圈养的箱龟中,通过临床评估和实时PCR对圈养野生个体群体中的蛙病毒爆发情况进行了监测。在为期两年的研究期间,该群体的死亡率为71.6%,这表明蛙病毒可使种群迅速衰减。观察到感染率存在很大差异(每个采样期为7%-94%),这可能是由清除和再感染、适应性免疫或使用非侵入性样本检测不完善所致。只有鼻部临床症状与感染状况显著相关,且样本类型之间的一致性较低。在首次爆发后,观察到蛙病毒的死亡率较低但实时PCR流行率较高,这表明存活个体可能具有耐受性。