National Museum of Natural History, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria.
Birds of Prey Protection Society, Sofia, Bulgaria.
Malar J. 2018 Jan 16;17(1):33. doi: 10.1186/s12936-018-2179-7.
Blood parasites have been studied intensely in many families of avian hosts, but corvids, a particularly cosmopolitan family, remain underexplored. Haemosporidian parasites of the common raven (Corvus corax) have not been studied, although it is the largest, most adaptable, and widespread corvid. Genetic sequence data from parasites of ravens can enhance the understanding of speciation patterns and specificity of haemosporidian parasites in corvids, and shed light how these hosts cope with parasite pressure.
A baited cage trap was used to catch 86 ravens and a nested PCR protocol was used to amplify a 479 bp fragment of the haemosporidian cytochrome b gene from the samples. The obtained sequences were compared with the MalAvi database of all published haemosporidian lineages and a phylogenetic tree including all detected raven parasites was constructed. An examination of blood smears was performed for assessment of infection intensity.
Twenty blood parasite lineages were recovered from ravens caught in a wild population in Bulgaria. The prevalence of generalist Plasmodium lineages was 49%, and the prevalence of Leucocytozoon lineages was 31%. Out of 13 detected Leucocytozoon lineages six were known from different corvids, while seven others seem to be specific to ravens. A phylogenetic reconstruction suggests that Leucocytozoon lineages of ravens and other corvids are not monophyletic, with some groups appearing closely related to parasites of other host families.
Several different, morphologically cryptic groups of Leucocytozoon parasites appear to infect corvids. Ravens harbour both generalist corvid Leucocytozoon as well as apparently species-specific lineages. The extraordinary breeding ecology and scavenging lifestyle possibly allow ravens to evade vectors and have relatively low blood parasite prevalence compared to other corvids.
在许多鸟类宿主的科中,血液寄生虫已得到深入研究,但鸦科作为一个特别全球化的家族,仍未得到充分探索。尽管普通乌鸦(Corvus corax)是最大、最适应和分布最广的鸦科动物,但尚未对其血液寄生虫进行研究。来自乌鸦的血液寄生虫的遗传序列数据可以增强对血液寄生虫在鸦科中的物种形成模式和特异性的理解,并阐明这些宿主如何应对寄生虫压力。
使用诱饵笼陷阱捕获了 86 只乌鸦,并使用嵌套 PCR 方案从样本中扩增了血液寄生虫细胞色素 b 基因的 479bp 片段。获得的序列与 MalAvi 数据库中所有已发表的血液寄生虫谱系进行了比较,并构建了包括所有检测到的乌鸦寄生虫的系统发育树。对血涂片进行检查以评估感染强度。
从保加利亚野生种群中捕获的乌鸦中回收了 20 种血液寄生虫谱系。普通疟原虫谱系的流行率为 49%,白细胞虫谱系的流行率为 31%。在检测到的 13 种白细胞虫谱系中,有 6 种已知存在于不同的鸦科动物中,而另外 7 种似乎是乌鸦特有的。系统发育重建表明,乌鸦和其他鸦科动物的白细胞虫谱系不是单系的,有些群体与其他宿主科的寄生虫密切相关。
几种不同的、形态上隐蔽的白细胞虫寄生虫群体似乎感染了鸦科动物。乌鸦既携带普通的鸦科白细胞虫,也携带似乎是特定于物种的谱系。非凡的繁殖生态和食腐生活方式可能使乌鸦能够逃避媒介,并与其他鸦科动物相比,血液寄生虫的流行率相对较低。