Occhibove Flavia, McKeown Niall J, Risley Claire, Ironside Joseph E
IBERS, Aberystwyth University, Aberystwyth, SY23 3DA, UK.
UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, OX10 8BB, UK.
Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl. 2022 Mar 12;17:278-287. doi: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2022.02.010. eCollection 2022 Apr.
Wild rodent communities represent ideal systems to study pathogens and parasites shared among sympatric species. Such studies are useful in the investigation of eco-epidemiological dynamics, improving disease management strategies and reducing zoonotic risk. The aim of this study was to investigate pathogen and parasites shared among rodent species (multi-host community) in West Wales in an area where human/wildlife disease risk was not previously assessed. West Wales is predominantly rural, with human settlements located alongside to grazing areas and semi-natural landscapes, creating a critical human-livestock-wildlife interface. Ground-dwelling wild rodent communities in Wales were live-trapped and biological samples - faeces and ectoparasites - collected and screened for a suite of pathogens and parasites that differ in types of transmission and ecology. Faecal samples were examined to detect Herpesvirus, , and . Ticks and fleas were collected, identified to species based on morphology and genetic barcodes, and then screened for , , sensu lato, and sp. All the pathogens and parasites screened pose a characteristic epidemiological challenge, such as variable level of generalism, unknown zoonotic potential, and lack of data. The results showed that the bank vole had the highest prevalence of all pathogens and parasites. Higher flea species diversity was detected than in previous studies, and at least two species were found circulating, one of which has not previously been detected in the UK. These key findings offer new insights into the distribution of selected pathogen and parasites and subsequent zoonotic risk, and provide new baselines and perspectives for further eco-epidemiological research.
野生啮齿动物群落是研究同域物种间共享的病原体和寄生虫的理想系统。此类研究有助于调查生态流行病学动态、改进疾病管理策略并降低人畜共患病风险。本研究的目的是在威尔士西部一个此前未评估过人类/野生动物疾病风险的地区,调查啮齿动物物种(多宿主群落)间共享的病原体和寄生虫。威尔士西部主要为农村地区,人类住区与放牧区及半自然景观相邻,形成了关键的人类-牲畜-野生动物界面。对威尔士地面栖息的野生啮齿动物群落进行了活体诱捕,并采集了粪便和体外寄生虫等生物样本,对一系列在传播类型和生态学方面存在差异的病原体和寄生虫进行了筛查。对粪便样本进行检测以发现疱疹病毒、[此处原文缺失部分病原体名称]。采集蜱和跳蚤,根据形态学和基因条形码鉴定到物种,然后对[此处原文缺失部分病原体名称]进行筛查。所有筛查的病原体和寄生虫都带来了独特的流行病学挑战,如普遍程度各异、人畜共患病潜力未知以及缺乏数据。结果表明,小林姬鼠感染所有病原体和寄生虫的患病率最高。检测到的跳蚤物种多样性高于以往研究,并且发现至少两种[此处原文缺失部分病原体名称]在传播,其中一种此前在英国未被检测到。这些关键发现为选定病原体和寄生虫的分布以及后续人畜共患病风险提供了新见解,并为进一步的生态流行病学研究提供了新的基线和视角。