Escobar Luis E, Carver Scott, Cross Paul C, Rossi Luca, Almberg Emily S, Yabsley Michael J, Niedringhaus Kevin D, Van Wick Peach, Dominguez-Villegas Ernesto, Gakuya Francis, Xie Yue, Angelone Samer, Gortázar Christian, Astorga Francisca
Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia.
Transbound Emerg Dis. 2022 May;69(3):927-942. doi: 10.1111/tbed.14082. Epub 2021 May 2.
Sarcoptic mange, a skin infestation caused by the mite Sarcoptes scabiei, is an emerging disease for some species of wildlife, potentially jeopardizing their welfare and conservation. Sarcoptes scabiei has a near-global distribution facilitated by its forms of transmission and use of a large diversity of host species (many of those with broad geographic distribution). In this review, we synthesize the current knowledge concerning the geographic and host taxonomic distribution of mange in wildlife, the epidemiological connections between species, and the potential threat of sarcoptic mange for wildlife conservation. Recent sarcoptic mange outbreaks in wildlife appear to demonstrate ongoing geographic spread, increase in the number of hosts and increased virulence. Sarcoptic mange has been reported in at least 12 orders, 39 families and 148 species of domestic and wild mammals, making it one of the most generalist ectoparasites of mammals. Taxonomically, the orders with most species found infested so far include Perissodactyla (67% species from the entire order), Artiodactyla (47%), and Diprotodontia (67% from this order). This suggests that new species from these mammal orders are likely to suffer cross-species transmission and be reported positive to sarcoptic mange as surveillance improves. We propose a new agenda for the study of sarcoptic mange in wildlife, including the study of the global phylogeography of S. scabiei, linkages between ecological host traits and sarcoptic mange susceptibility, immunology of individuals and species, development of control strategies in wildlife outbreaks and the effects of global environmental change in the sarcoptic mange system. The ongoing transmission globally and sustained spread among areas and wildlife species make sarcoptic mange an emerging panzootic in wildlife. A better understanding of sarcoptic mange could illuminate the aspects of ecological and evolutionary drivers in cross-species transmission for many emerging diseases.
疥螨病是由疥螨引起的一种皮肤寄生虫病,对一些野生动物物种来说是一种新出现的疾病,可能会危及它们的健康和保护。疥螨通过多种传播方式以及寄生于大量不同宿主物种(其中许多宿主具有广泛的地理分布)而几乎遍布全球。在本综述中,我们综合了有关野生动物疥螨病的地理分布和宿主分类分布、物种间的流行病学联系以及疥螨病对野生动物保护的潜在威胁的现有知识。近期野生动物中疥螨病的爆发似乎表明其在地理上持续扩散、宿主数量增加且毒力增强。疥螨病已在至少12目、39科以及148种家养和野生哺乳动物中被报道,这使其成为哺乳动物中最具普遍性的体外寄生虫之一。从分类学角度来看,迄今为止发现感染物种最多的目包括奇蹄目(占该目所有物种的67%)、偶蹄目(47%)和双门齿目(该目物种的67%)。这表明随着监测的改进,这些哺乳动物目中的新物种可能会遭受跨物种传播并被检测出疥螨病呈阳性。我们提出了一个关于野生动物疥螨病研究的新议程,包括对疥螨全球系统发育地理学的研究、生态宿主特征与疥螨易感性之间的联系、个体和物种的免疫学、野生动物疫情控制策略的制定以及全球环境变化对疥螨病系统的影响。疥螨病在全球范围内持续传播并在不同地区和野生动物物种间持续扩散,使其成为野生动物中一种新出现的大流行病。对疥螨病的更好理解可以阐明许多新出现疾病跨物种传播中的生态和进化驱动因素。