Department of Veterinary Medicine and Epidemiology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
Wildlife Investigations Laboratory, California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Rancho Cordova, California, USA.
Transbound Emerg Dis. 2019 Nov;66(6):2252-2263. doi: 10.1111/tbed.13272. Epub 2019 Jul 4.
The genus Amdoparvovirus includes the newly discovered skunk amdoparvovirus and the well-characterized Aleutian disease virus which causes significant health impacts in farmed mink worldwide. In 2010-2013, an outbreak of fatal amdoparvovirus-associated disease was documented in free-ranging striped skunks (Mephitis mephitis) from the San Francisco Bay Area of California. To characterize the geographic distribution, earliest occurrence and abundance of this virus, as well as possible impacts on sympatric mustelids of conservation concern, we tested blood samples from skunks throughout California and fishers (Pekania pennanti) from northern California for amdoparvovirus DNA. Amdoparvovirus DNA was detected in 64.8% of sampled skunks (140/216), and test-positive skunks were distributed widely throughout the state, from as far north as Humboldt County and south to San Diego County. The first test-positive skunks were detected from 2004, prior to the 2010-2013 outbreak. No significant spatial or temporal clustering of infection was detected. Although healthy and clinically ill animals tested positive for amdoparvovirus DNA, histopathologic evaluation of a subset from clinically ill skunks indicated that positive PCR results were associated with pneumonia as well as there being more than one inflammatory type lesion. None of 38 fishers were PCR-positive. Given the widespread geographic distribution and lack of a clear epizootic centre, our results suggest the presence of an endemic skunk-associated amdoparvovirus strain or species. However, if the virus is not host-specific, skunks' ubiquitous presence across rural and urban habitats may pose a risk to susceptible domestic and wild species including mustelids of conservation concern such as fishers and Pacific martens (Martes caurina).
该属包括新发现的臭鼬细小病毒和特征明显的阿留申病病毒,这两种病毒对全球养殖水貂的健康造成了重大影响。2010-2013 年,加利福尼亚州旧金山湾区的自由放养条纹臭鼬(Mephitis mephitis)中记录了一种致命的细小病毒相关疾病的爆发。为了描述这种病毒的地理分布、最早发生时间和丰度,以及对受关注的共生鼬科动物的可能影响,我们检测了来自加利福尼亚州各地的臭鼬和来自加利福尼亚州北部的渔貂(Pekania pennanti)的血液样本,以检测细小病毒 DNA。在采集的 216 只臭鼬中有 64.8%(140/216)检测到细小病毒 DNA,并且检测为阳性的臭鼬分布在全州范围内,从最北部的洪堡县到南部的圣地亚哥县都有分布。最早的检测阳性臭鼬出现在 2004 年,早于 2010-2013 年的爆发。未检测到感染的显著空间或时间聚集。尽管健康和临床患病的动物检测到细小病毒 DNA 阳性,但对来自临床患病臭鼬的一部分动物进行组织病理学评估表明,PCR 阳性结果与肺炎以及存在不止一种炎症类型病变有关。38 只渔貂均未检测到 PCR 阳性。鉴于广泛的地理分布和没有明确的流行中心,我们的结果表明存在地方性的臭鼬相关细小病毒株或种。然而,如果该病毒不是宿主特异性的,那么臭鼬在农村和城市栖息地的普遍存在可能会对易受感染的家养和野生动物造成威胁,包括受关注的鼬科动物,如渔貂和太平洋马更些(Martes caurina)。