School of Biological Sciences, Washington State University, P.O. Box 644236, Pullman, WA, 99164, U.S.A.
Department of Entomology, Washington State University, 100 Dairy Road, P.O. Box 646382, Pullman, WA, 99164, U.S.A.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2020 Jun;95(3):652-679. doi: 10.1111/brv.12581. Epub 2020 Jan 31.
Enteric illnesses remain the second largest source of communicable diseases worldwide, and wild birds are suspected sources for human infection. This has led to efforts to reduce pathogen spillover through deterrence of wildlife and removal of wildlife habitat, particularly within farming systems, which can compromise conservation efforts and the ecosystem services wild birds provide. Further, Salmonella spp. are a significant cause of avian mortality, leading to additional conservation concerns. Despite numerous studies of enteric bacteria in wild birds and policies to discourage birds from food systems, we lack a comprehensive understanding of wild bird involvement in transmission of enteric bacteria to humans. Here, we propose a framework for understanding spillover of enteric pathogens from wild birds to humans, which includes pathogen acquisition, reservoir competence and bacterial shedding, contact with people and food, and pathogen survival in the environment. We place the literature into this framework to identify important knowledge gaps. Second, we conduct a meta-analysis of prevalence data for three human enteric pathogens, Campylobacter spp., E. coli, and Salmonella spp., in 431 North American breeding bird species. Our literature review revealed that only 3% of studies addressed the complete system of pathogen transmission. In our meta-analysis, we found a Campylobacter spp. prevalence of 27% across wild birds, while prevalence estimates of pathogenic E. coli (20%) and Salmonella spp. (6.4%) were lower. There was significant bias in which bird species have been tested, with most studies focusing on a small number of taxa that are common near people (e.g. European starlings Sturnus vulgaris and rock pigeons Columba livia) or commonly in contact with human waste (e.g. gulls). No pathogen prevalence data were available for 65% of North American breeding bird species, including many commonly in contact with humans (e.g. black-billed magpie Pica hudsonia and great blue heron Ardea herodias), and our metadata suggest that some under-studied species, taxonomic groups, and guilds may represent equivalent or greater risk to human infection than heavily studied species. We conclude that current data do not provide sufficient information to determine the likelihood of enteric pathogen spillover from wild birds to humans and thus preclude management solutions. The primary focus in the literature on pathogen prevalence likely overestimates the probability of enteric pathogen spillover from wild birds to humans because a pathogen must survive long enough at an infectious dose and be a strain that is able to colonize humans to cause infection. We propose that future research should focus on the large number of under-studied species commonly in contact with people and food production and demonstrate shedding of bacterial strains pathogenic to humans into the environment where people may contact them. Finally, studies assessing the duration and intensity of bacterial shedding and survival of bacteria in the environment in bird faeces will help provide crucial missing information necessary to calculate spillover probability. Addressing these essential knowledge gaps will support policy to reduce enteric pathogen spillover to humans and enhance bird conservation efforts that are currently undermined by unsupported fears of pathogen spillover from wild birds.
肠道疾病仍然是全球第二大传染性疾病来源,而野生鸟类被怀疑是人类感染的来源。这导致人们努力通过威慑野生动物和清除野生动物栖息地来减少病原体溢出,特别是在农业系统中,这可能会损害保护工作和野生鸟类提供的生态系统服务。此外,沙门氏菌是导致鸟类死亡的重要原因,这引发了更多的保护问题。尽管有许多关于野生鸟类肠道细菌的研究和阻止鸟类进入食物系统的政策,但我们仍然缺乏对野生鸟类在将肠道细菌传播给人类方面的全面了解。在这里,我们提出了一个理解肠道病原体从野生鸟类溢出到人类的框架,包括病原体的获得、宿主的易感性和细菌的脱落、与人类和食物的接触,以及病原体在环境中的存活。我们将文献纳入该框架,以确定重要的知识空白。其次,我们对北美 431 种繁殖鸟类中三种人类肠道病原体的流行率数据进行了荟萃分析,这三种病原体分别是弯曲杆菌属、大肠杆菌和沙门氏菌。我们的文献综述发现,只有 3%的研究涉及完整的病原体传播系统。在我们的荟萃分析中,我们发现野生鸟类中弯曲杆菌属的流行率为 27%,而致病性大肠杆菌(20%)和沙门氏菌(6.4%)的流行率较低。被检测的鸟类物种存在显著的偏差,大多数研究集中在少数靠近人类的常见鸟类(如欧洲椋鸟和家鸽)或常见于人类粪便的鸟类(如海鸥)上。65%的北美繁殖鸟类物种没有病原体流行率数据,其中包括许多与人类密切接触的鸟类(如黑嘴喜鹊和美洲鹤),我们的元数据表明,一些研究较少的物种、分类群和 guild 可能比研究较多的物种更具感染人类的风险。我们得出的结论是,目前的数据不足以确定肠道病原体从野生鸟类溢出到人类的可能性,因此也无法确定管理解决方案。文献中对病原体流行率的主要关注可能高估了肠道病原体从野生鸟类溢出到人类的可能性,因为病原体必须在足够长的时间内以感染剂量存活,并成为能够定植人类并引起感染的菌株。我们建议,未来的研究应该集中在大量与人类和食物生产密切接触的研究较少的物种上,并证明对人类具有致病性的细菌菌株在人类可能接触到的环境中脱落。最后,评估细菌在粪便中脱落的持续时间和强度以及在环境中细菌的存活情况的研究将有助于提供计算溢出概率所需的关键缺失信息。解决这些基本的知识空白将支持减少肠道病原体溢出到人类的政策,并加强鸟类保护工作,这些工作目前因对野生鸟类病原体溢出的无端恐惧而受到破坏。