Department of Zoology, University of Otago, 340 Great King St, Dunedin, 9016, New Zealand.
Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research, PO Box 69040, Lincoln, 7640, New Zealand.
Parasitol Res. 2024 Apr 16;123(4):184. doi: 10.1007/s00436-024-08210-4.
The past few years have been marked by a drastic increase in pathogen spillover events. However, the extent and taxonomic range at which these events take place remain as crucial unanswered questions in many host-pathogen systems. Here, we take advantage of opportunistically sampled bird carcasses from the South Island of New Zealand, with the aim of identifying Plasmodium spp. infections in native and endemic New Zealand seabird species. In total, six samples from five bird species were positive for avian malaria, including four of which were successfully sequenced and identified as Plasmodium matutinum LINN1 lineage. These results provide new Plasmodium infection records in seabirds, including the first documented case in Procellariiformes in New Zealand, highlighting the potential disease risk to these species.
过去几年,病原体溢出事件急剧增加。然而,在许多宿主-病原体系统中,这些事件发生的程度和分类范围仍然是至关重要的未解决问题。在这里,我们利用从新西兰南岛偶然采集的鸟类尸体,旨在鉴定本地和地方性新西兰海鸟物种中的疟原虫属感染。总共有来自五个鸟类物种的六个样本对禽疟原虫呈阳性,其中四个成功测序并鉴定为 LINN1 谱系的疟原虫属 matutinum。这些结果提供了海鸟中疟原虫属感染的新记录,包括新西兰信天翁目中的首例记录,突出了这些物种面临的潜在疾病风险。