Weyand Logan K, Felts Brandi L, Cassirer E Frances, Jenks Jonathan A, Walsh Daniel P, Besser Thomas E
Department of Veterinary Microbiology and Pathology, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington, USA.
Department of Natural Resource Management, South Dakota State University, Brookings, South Dakota, USA.
J Clin Microbiol. 2025 Feb 19;63(2):e0132824. doi: 10.1128/jcm.01328-24. Epub 2025 Jan 21.
We hypothesized that bighorn sheep ewes with chronic nasal carriage are the source of infection that results in fatal lamb pneumonia. We tested this hypothesis in captive bighorn ewes at two study facilities over a 5-year period, by identifying carrier ewes and then comparing lamb fates in groups that did (exposed pens) or did not (non-exposed pens) include one or more carrier ewes. Most (23 of 30) lambs born in exposed pens, but none of 11 lambs born in non-exposed pens, contracted fatal pneumonia. In addition, surviving lambs in exposed pens showed obvious signs of respiratory disease while lambs in non-exposed pens did not. In crossover experiments, individual non-carrier ewes had lambs that experienced fatal pneumonia in years when housed in exposed pens, but not in years when housed in non-exposed pens. The results of these studies clearly associate lamb pneumonia to exposure to carrier ewes, consistent with a necessary role for this agent in epizootic pneumonia of bighorn sheep. These data specifically highlight the role of chronic carriage by some bighorn ewes in the epidemiology of this population-limiting wildlife disease.IMPORTANCEBighorn sheep populations, historically important in mountain and canyon ecosystems of western North America, declined precipitously following European settlement of North America and remain depressed today. One factor contributing to these declines and lack of recovery is epizootic pneumonia caused by the bacterium . This pathogen arrived with settlers' domestic sheep and goats and spilled over to infect bighorn sheep, a process that continues to this day. Bighorn losses from this disease include high rates of mortality (median, approaching 50%) of all ages of bighorn sheep on initial exposure, followed in subsequent years to decades by mortality largely limited to young lambs. The source of infection causing persistent lamb losses is the focus of the research described here. Conducting these studies on groups of captive bighorn sheep enabled demonstration of clear linkage between largely asymptomatic nasal carriage of by ewes and outbreaks of fatal pneumonia in lambs.
我们假设,患有慢性鼻腔携带病菌的大角羊母羊是导致致命羔羊肺炎的感染源。在5年时间里,我们在两个研究机构对圈养大角羊母羊进行了测试,以验证这一假设。方法是识别携带病菌的母羊,然后比较有(暴露围栏组)或没有(未暴露围栏组)一只或多只携带病菌母羊的组中羔羊的命运。暴露围栏组出生的大多数羔羊(30只中的23只)感染了致命肺炎,而未暴露围栏组出生的11只羔羊无一感染。此外,暴露围栏组中存活的羔羊表现出明显的呼吸道疾病症状,而未暴露围栏组的羔羊则没有。在交叉实验中,个体非携带病菌的母羊所产羔羊,在饲养于暴露围栏组的年份会感染致命肺炎,而在饲养于未暴露围栏组的年份则不会。这些研究结果清楚地表明羔羊肺炎与接触携带病菌的母羊有关,这与该病原体在大角羊流行性肺炎中所起的必要作用相一致。这些数据特别突出了一些大角羊母羊的慢性携带病菌状态在这种限制种群数量的野生动物疾病流行病学中的作用。
重要性
大角羊种群在北美西部的山区和峡谷生态系统中历史上具有重要意义,在欧洲人定居北美后数量急剧下降,至今仍处于低迷状态。导致这些下降和缺乏恢复的一个因素是由该细菌引起的流行性肺炎。这种病原体随着定居者的家养绵羊和山羊传入,并传播开来感染大角羊,这一过程至今仍在继续。这种疾病导致的大角羊损失包括初次接触时所有年龄段大角羊的高死亡率(中位数接近50%),随后在数年至数十年间,死亡率主要限于幼龄羔羊。导致羔羊持续死亡的感染源是此处所描述研究的重点。对圈养大角羊群进行这些研究能够证明母羊在很大程度上无症状的鼻腔携带病菌与羔羊致命肺炎爆发之间存在明确联系。