Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, Canada.
PLoS One. 2023 Aug 30;18(8):e0290755. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0290755. eCollection 2023.
Urban coyotes (Canis latrans) in North America increasingly exhibit a high prevalence of Echinococcus multilocularis, a cestode of recent and rising public health concern that uses rodents as intermediate hosts and canids as definitive hosts. However, little is known about the factors that drive the high urban prevalence of this parasite. We hypothesized that the diet of urban coyotes may contribute to their higher E. multilocularis infection prevalence via either (a) greater exposure to the parasite from increased rodent consumption or (b) increased susceptibility to infection due to the negative health effects of consuming anthropogenic food. We tested these hypotheses by comparing the presence and intensity of E. multilocularis infection to physiological data (age, sex, body condition, and spleen mass), short-term diet (stomach contents), and long-term diet (δ13C and δ15N stable isotopes) in 112 coyote carcasses collected for reasons other than this study from Edmonton, Alberta and the surrounding area. Overall, the best predictor of infection status in this population was young age, where the likelihood of infection decreased with age in rural coyotes but not urban ones. Neither short- nor long-term measures of diet could predict infection across our entire sample, but we found support for our initial hypotheses in young, urban coyotes: both rodent and anthropogenic food consumption effectively predicted E. multilocularis infection in this population. The effects of these predictors were more variable in rural coyotes and older coyotes. We suggest that limiting coyote access to areas in which anthropogenic food and rodent habitat overlap (e.g., compost piles or garbage sites) may effectively reduce the risk of infection, deposition, and transmission of this emerging zoonotic parasite in urban areas.
北美的城市郊狼(Canis latrans)中,细粒棘球绦虫(Echinococcus multilocularis)的流行率越来越高,这种绦虫最近引起了人们越来越多的关注,因为它对公共卫生构成了威胁,其中间宿主是啮齿动物,终末宿主是犬科动物。然而,人们对导致这种寄生虫在城市中高流行率的因素知之甚少。我们假设,城市郊狼的饮食可能通过以下两种途径导致其更高的细粒棘球绦虫感染率:(a)由于增加了对啮齿动物的接触,从而增加了对寄生虫的暴露;或(b)由于食用人为食物对健康产生负面影响,导致对感染的易感性增加。我们通过比较 112 只在艾伯塔省埃德蒙顿市及周边地区因其他原因而非本研究而收集的郊狼尸体的 E. multilocularis 感染的存在和强度与生理数据(年龄、性别、身体状况和脾脏质量)、短期饮食(胃内容物)和长期饮食(δ13C 和 δ15N 稳定同位素),来检验这些假设。总体而言,该人群感染状况的最佳预测指标是年龄较小,在农村郊狼中,感染的可能性随着年龄的增长而降低,但在城市郊狼中则不然。短期和长期的饮食措施都不能预测我们整个样本的感染情况,但我们在年轻的城市郊狼中发现了对我们最初假设的支持:啮齿动物和人为食物的消耗都有效地预测了该人群中的细粒棘球绦虫感染。在农村郊狼和老年郊狼中,这些预测因素的影响更为多变。我们建议,限制郊狼进入与人为食物和啮齿动物栖息地重叠的区域(例如,堆肥堆或垃圾场),可能会有效地降低这种新兴人畜共患病寄生虫在城市地区的感染、沉积和传播风险。