Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM), CSIC, Passeig Marítim de la Barceloneta 37-49, 08003 Barcelona, Spain; Departamento de Ciencias de la Vida, Universidad de Alcalá, Alcalá de Henares, Madrid, Spain.
Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM), CSIC, Passeig Marítim de la Barceloneta 37-49, 08003 Barcelona, Spain.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Feb 20;912:168762. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.168762. Epub 2023 Nov 23.
Wildlife human interactions within cities are becoming more common with consequences for pathogen transmission and human health. Large gulls are opportunistic feeders, adapted to coexist with humans in urban environments, and are potential vectors for spread and transmission of pathogens, including antimicrobial-resistant bacteria. We investigated the potential role that urban gulls play in the spread and dispersal of these bacteria. We analysed 129 faecal swabs from yellow-legged gulls (Larus michahellis) of different ages (56 adults and 73 immatures) during the breeding period from three years in the highly populated city of Barcelona (northeastern Spain). Thirteen individuals tested positive for the pathogenic bacteria (Escherichia coli, Listeria monocytogenes, Campylobacter jejuni), including antibiotic-resistant strains. We modelled the potential spatial spread of pathogens using the GPS trajectories of 58 yellow-legged gulls (23 adults, 35 immature individuals), which included the thirteen individuals that tested positive for pathogenic bacteria. By overlapping the spatially explicit pathogen dispersal maps with the distribution of urban installations sensitive at risk of possible pathogen spillover (e.g. elder and medical centres, markets, food industries, kindergartens, or public water sources), we identified potential areas at risk of pathogen spillover. Pathogens may be potentially spread to municipalities beyond Barcelona city borders. The results revealed that immature gulls dispersed pathogens over larger areas than adults (maximum dispersal distances of 167 km versus 53.2 km, respectively). Recreational urban water sources were the most sensitive habitats visited by GPS-tagged gulls that tested positive, followed by schools. Combining GPS movement data with pathogen analytics allows spatially explicit maps to be generated using a One Health approach that can help urban and public health management within large cities, such as Barcelona, and identify areas used by humans that are sensitive to pathogen spillover from gulls.
城市中的野生动物与人类的相互作用越来越频繁,这对病原体传播和人类健康造成了影响。大型海鸥是机会主义的食腐动物,适应了在城市环境中与人类共存,并且是病原体(包括耐抗生素细菌)传播和传播的潜在媒介。我们研究了城市海鸥在这些细菌的传播和扩散中可能发挥的作用。我们分析了 129 份来自巴塞罗那(西班牙东北部人口稠密的城市)三个繁殖季节的不同年龄(56 只成年和 73 只幼鸟)的黄腿海鸥(Larus michahellis)粪便样本。有 13 只个体检测出致病性细菌(大肠杆菌、李斯特菌、空肠弯曲菌)呈阳性,包括抗生素耐药菌株。我们使用 58 只黄腿海鸥(23 只成年,35 只幼鸟)的 GPS 轨迹来模拟潜在的病原体空间扩散,其中包括 13 只检测出致病性细菌呈阳性的个体。通过将病原体扩散的空间明确地图与可能发生病原体溢出的城市设施的分布(例如老年人和医疗中心、市场、食品工业、幼儿园或公共水源)重叠,我们确定了可能面临病原体溢出风险的潜在区域。病原体可能会潜在地传播到巴塞罗那市边界以外的市镇。研究结果表明,幼鸟比成年鸟传播病原体的范围更广(最大扩散距离分别为 167 公里和 53.2 公里)。GPS 标记的海鸥检测到的阳性样本最常访问的是娱乐性城市水源,其次是学校。将 GPS 运动数据与病原体分析相结合,可以使用一种“同一健康”方法生成空间明确的地图,这有助于管理巴塞罗那等大城市的城市和公共卫生,并确定人类使用的对海鸥病原体溢出敏感的区域。