French Rebecca K, Anderson Sandra, Cain Kristal, Digby Andrew, Greene Terry C, Miskelly Colin M, Muller Chris G, Taylor Michael W, Recovery Team Kākāpō, Geoghegan Jemma L, Holmes Edward C
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Otago, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand.
School of Medical Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
Virus Evol. 2024 Dec 14;11(1):veae113. doi: 10.1093/ve/veae113. eCollection 2025.
The ability of viruses to emerge in new species is influenced by aspects of host biology and ecology, with some taxa harbouring a high diversity and abundance of viruses. However, how these factors shape virus diversity at the ecosystem scale is often unclear. To better understand the pattern and determinants of viral diversity within an ecosystem, and to describe the novel avian viruses infecting an individual avian community, we performed a metagenomic snapshot of the virome from the entire avian community on remote Pukenui/Anchor Island in Aotearoa New Zealand. Through total RNA sequencing of 18 bird species, we identified 50 avian viruses from 9 viral families, of which 96% were novel. Of note, passerines (perching birds) exhibited high viral abundance and diversity, with viruses found across all nine viral families identified. We also identified numerous viruses infecting seabirds on the Island, including megriviruses, hepaciviruses, and hepatoviruses, while parrots exhibited an extremely low diversity of avian viruses. Within passerines, closely related astroviruses and hepatoviruses, and multiple identical hepe-like viruses, were shared among host species. Phylogenetic reconciliation analysis of these viral groups revealed a mixture of co-divergence and cross-species transmission, with virus host-jumping relatively frequent among passerines. In contrast, there was no evidence for recent cross-species virus transmission in parrots or seabirds. The novel pegiviruses and a flavivirus identified here also pose intriguing questions regarding their origins, pathogenicity, and potential impact on vertebrate hosts. Overall, these results highlight the importance of understudied remote island ecosystems as refugia for novel viruses, as well as the intricate interplay between host ecology and behaviour in shaping viral communities.
病毒在新物种中出现的能力受到宿主生物学和生态学方面的影响,一些分类群中存在高度多样且丰富的病毒。然而,这些因素如何在生态系统尺度上塑造病毒多样性往往尚不清楚。为了更好地理解生态系统内病毒多样性的模式和决定因素,并描述感染单个鸟类群落的新型禽病毒,我们对新西兰奥特亚罗瓦偏远的普凯努伊/安克岛整个鸟类群落的病毒组进行了宏基因组快照分析。通过对18种鸟类的总RNA测序,我们从9个病毒科中鉴定出50种禽病毒,其中96%是新型的。值得注意的是,雀形目鸟类(鸣禽)表现出高病毒丰度和多样性,在所有九个已鉴定的病毒科中都发现了病毒。我们还鉴定出许多感染该岛海鸟的病毒,包括巨核糖核酸病毒、丙型肝炎病毒和肝病毒,而鹦鹉表现出极低的禽病毒多样性。在雀形目鸟类中,宿主物种之间共享密切相关的星状病毒和肝病毒,以及多种相同的类肝炎病毒。对这些病毒组的系统发育和解分析揭示了共分化和跨物种传播的混合情况,雀形目鸟类之间病毒宿主跳跃相对频繁。相比之下,没有证据表明鹦鹉或海鸟近期存在跨物种病毒传播。这里鉴定出的新型戊型肝炎病毒和一种黄病毒也引发了关于它们的起源、致病性以及对脊椎动物宿主潜在影响的有趣问题。总体而言,这些结果凸显了研究不足的偏远岛屿生态系统作为新型病毒避难所的重要性,以及宿主生态学和行为在塑造病毒群落中的复杂相互作用。