Migratory birds reinforce local circulation of avian influenza viruses.

Migratory and resident hosts have been hypothesized to fulfil distinct roles in infectious disease dynamics. However, the contribution of resident and migratory hosts to wildlife infectious disease epidemiology, including that of low pathogenic avian influenza virus (LPAIV) in wild birds, has largel...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Josanne H Verhagen, Jacintha G B van Dijk, Oanh Vuong, Theo Bestebroer, Pascal Lexmond, Marcel Klaassen, Ron A M Fouchier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4229208?pdf=render
id doaj-fc256d6a0cd148bcb29226f8f5e59f94
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fc256d6a0cd148bcb29226f8f5e59f942020-11-25T01:19:50ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01911e11236610.1371/journal.pone.0112366Migratory birds reinforce local circulation of avian influenza viruses.Josanne H VerhagenJacintha G B van DijkOanh VuongTheo BestebroerPascal LexmondMarcel KlaassenRon A M FouchierMigratory and resident hosts have been hypothesized to fulfil distinct roles in infectious disease dynamics. However, the contribution of resident and migratory hosts to wildlife infectious disease epidemiology, including that of low pathogenic avian influenza virus (LPAIV) in wild birds, has largely remained unstudied. During an autumn H3 LPAIV epizootic in free-living mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) - a partially migratory species - we identified resident and migratory host populations using stable hydrogen isotope analysis of flight feathers. We investigated the role of migratory and resident hosts separately in the introduction and maintenance of H3 LPAIV during the epizootic. To test this we analysed (i) H3 virus kinship, (ii) temporal patterns in H3 virus prevalence and shedding and (iii) H3-specific antibody prevalence in relation to host migratory strategy. We demonstrate that the H3 LPAIV strain causing the epizootic most likely originated from a single introduction, followed by local clonal expansion. The H3 LPAIV strain was genetically unrelated to H3 LPAIV detected both before and after the epizootic at the study site. During the LPAIV epizootic, migratory mallards were more often infected with H3 LPAIV than residents. Low titres of H3-specific antibodies were detected in only a few residents and migrants. Our results suggest that in this LPAIV epizootic, a single H3 virus was present in resident mallards prior to arrival of migratory mallards followed by a period of virus amplification, importantly associated with the influx of migratory mallards. Thus migrants are suggested to act as local amplifiers rather than the often suggested role as vectors importing novel strains from afar. Our study exemplifies that a multifaceted interdisciplinary approach offers promising opportunities to elucidate the role of migratory and resident hosts in infectious disease dynamics in wildlife.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4229208?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Josanne H Verhagen
Jacintha G B van Dijk
Oanh Vuong
Theo Bestebroer
Pascal Lexmond
Marcel Klaassen
Ron A M Fouchier
spellingShingle Josanne H Verhagen
Jacintha G B van Dijk
Oanh Vuong
Theo Bestebroer
Pascal Lexmond
Marcel Klaassen
Ron A M Fouchier
Migratory birds reinforce local circulation of avian influenza viruses.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Josanne H Verhagen
Jacintha G B van Dijk
Oanh Vuong
Theo Bestebroer
Pascal Lexmond
Marcel Klaassen
Ron A M Fouchier
author_sort Josanne H Verhagen
title Migratory birds reinforce local circulation of avian influenza viruses.
title_short Migratory birds reinforce local circulation of avian influenza viruses.
title_full Migratory birds reinforce local circulation of avian influenza viruses.
title_fullStr Migratory birds reinforce local circulation of avian influenza viruses.
title_full_unstemmed Migratory birds reinforce local circulation of avian influenza viruses.
title_sort migratory birds reinforce local circulation of avian influenza viruses.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Migratory and resident hosts have been hypothesized to fulfil distinct roles in infectious disease dynamics. However, the contribution of resident and migratory hosts to wildlife infectious disease epidemiology, including that of low pathogenic avian influenza virus (LPAIV) in wild birds, has largely remained unstudied. During an autumn H3 LPAIV epizootic in free-living mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) - a partially migratory species - we identified resident and migratory host populations using stable hydrogen isotope analysis of flight feathers. We investigated the role of migratory and resident hosts separately in the introduction and maintenance of H3 LPAIV during the epizootic. To test this we analysed (i) H3 virus kinship, (ii) temporal patterns in H3 virus prevalence and shedding and (iii) H3-specific antibody prevalence in relation to host migratory strategy. We demonstrate that the H3 LPAIV strain causing the epizootic most likely originated from a single introduction, followed by local clonal expansion. The H3 LPAIV strain was genetically unrelated to H3 LPAIV detected both before and after the epizootic at the study site. During the LPAIV epizootic, migratory mallards were more often infected with H3 LPAIV than residents. Low titres of H3-specific antibodies were detected in only a few residents and migrants. Our results suggest that in this LPAIV epizootic, a single H3 virus was present in resident mallards prior to arrival of migratory mallards followed by a period of virus amplification, importantly associated with the influx of migratory mallards. Thus migrants are suggested to act as local amplifiers rather than the often suggested role as vectors importing novel strains from afar. Our study exemplifies that a multifaceted interdisciplinary approach offers promising opportunities to elucidate the role of migratory and resident hosts in infectious disease dynamics in wildlife.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4229208?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT josannehverhagen migratorybirdsreinforcelocalcirculationofavianinfluenzaviruses
AT jacinthagbvandijk migratorybirdsreinforcelocalcirculationofavianinfluenzaviruses
AT oanhvuong migratorybirdsreinforcelocalcirculationofavianinfluenzaviruses
AT theobestebroer migratorybirdsreinforcelocalcirculationofavianinfluenzaviruses
AT pascallexmond migratorybirdsreinforcelocalcirculationofavianinfluenzaviruses
AT marcelklaassen migratorybirdsreinforcelocalcirculationofavianinfluenzaviruses
AT ronamfouchier migratorybirdsreinforcelocalcirculationofavianinfluenzaviruses
_version_ 1725136988296708096