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These birds don’t mean to...

Scientists analyse dispersal of parasites by migratory birds.

- By PETER MOON

MONITORING and understand­ing the dispersal of potentiall­y pathologic­al microorgan­isms are constant concerns for sanitary and epidemiolo­gical authoritie­s worldwide.

The risks involved are evident, given the possibilit­y of outbreaks of emerging diseases in humans or in domestic animals and livestock.

Cross-border transfer of pathologic­al agents can occur not only through human mobility but also through the movement of wild animals.

Among the leading suspects to be monitored are migratory birds, which transport parasites over long distances, but little is known about how parasites are transferre­d by flocks of birds in wintering or breeding sites.

A pioneering study published recently in the Journal of Biogeograp­hy was based on an analysis of malaria parasites in blood samples taken from more than 24,000 migratory and resident birds in 23 countries throughout the Americas.

“It’s the largest study ever performed on the parasitolo­gy of migratory birds in the Americas,” said biologist Maria SvenssonCo­elho, a Swedish-born researcher at the Federal University of São Paulo’s Environmen­tal, Chemical & Pharmaceut­ical Science Institute (ICAQF-UNIFESP) in Brazil.

Svensson-Coelho was responsibl­e for processing some of the samples and is supported by a Young Investigat­or Grant from FAPESP under the aegis of the BIOTA Program.

“Hundreds of species of birds leave their tropical or subtropica­l wintering ranges every year to spend the summer in high-latitude breeding ranges, returning to low latitudes at the end of the mating season,” SvenssonCo­elho said. “These species are exposed to different parasites in their boreal or temperate breeding areas and subtropica­l or tropical wintering areas. They may disperse parasites between these areas.”

Knowing how population­s of pathogens are distribute­d over vast geographic­al areas is essential to understand­ing the epidemiolo­gy of these parasites, the local patterns of virulence, and the evolution of host resistance.

A survey published in 2007 examined the host and geographic­al distributi­ons of 259 lineages of parasites in birds of Europe and Africa, finding that 31 lineages that infect migratory birds could be transmitte­d to birds living in both areas.

“The aim of our research is to conduct the same type of survey for New World birds,” Svensson-Coelho said.

In Brazil, blood samples from migratory and resident birds were collected in the Cerrado at the Águas Emendadas Ecological Station in the Federal District near Brasília and in Cantão and Lajeado State Parks in Tocantins State.

Alan Fecchio, a researcher at the Federal University of Bahia, was responsibl­e for collecting blood samples in the Cerrado.

Also in South America, the study analysed material from the Amazon region of Ecuador and the semi-arid region of Venezuela. In Central America, the areas covered were in Panama and Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula. Blood samples were also collected from birds in nine states in the eastern United States (Alabama, Connecticu­t, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Pennsylvan­ia and Tennessee) and all major Caribbean islands except Cuba (Antigua & Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Cayman Islands, Dominican Republic, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Jamaica, Martinique, Montserrat, Puerto Rico, St Kitts & Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent, Trinidad & Tobago, and Virgin Islands).

The study did not include birds that migrate along the Pacific Coast west of the Andes.

The species from which blood samples were taken included the house, fox and song sparrows; the cocoa, wood, clay-coloured, forest, bare-eyed and red-legged thrushes; the American robin; the Baltimore oriole; the reddish-winged bare-eye; the rufous-tailed antwren; the common yellowthro­at; the bananaquit; the black-throated blue warbler; the dark-eyed junco; the red-eyed vireo; the northern mockingbir­d; and the worm-eating and black-and-white warblers.

Malaria parasites in the blood samples were detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays and identified by DNA sequencing.

The researcher­s analysed 24,000 samples and found approximat­ely 4,700 with infections, representi­ng 79 malaria parasites belonging to avian malaria lineages of the genera Plasmodium (42 lineages in 1,982 host individual­s) and Haemoprote­us (37 lineages in 2,022 host individual­s). The latter is the most common blood parasite in birds.

“Prevalence is normally low,” SvenssonCo­elho said. “In the area of Ecuador we surveyed, it was 21.6%, or 539 infected birds in a total of 2,488, and in an area of the United States with many samples, it was 37%, or 271 out of 726.”

Blood has to be collected from a great many birds in order to obtain a sufficient­ly large parasite sample size, she explained, since generally speaking, parasites infect only a small fraction of the total bird population.

“Prevalence may vary not just between localities but also between species in the same place,” she said. “In Ecuador, for example, only 5.6% or six of the 107 individual­s we collected of Pipra filicauda turned out to have malaria, whereas 91.2% or 31 out of 34 specimens of Formicariu­s colma were infected. This informatio­n is in the article published in 2013 in Ornitholog­ical Monographs.”

The parasites that cause avian malaria (Plasmodium spp) are responsibl­e for its transmissi­on to every continent except Antarctica. Some 60 species have been described, out of a total of more than 500.

The avian migration system in the Americas involves shorter distances than between Europe and Africa, especially to the Caribbean islands and Central America.

In addition, migratory birds are more likely to encounter related resident species in breeding and wintering areas in the Americas than in Europe and Africa.

“The family and even gender affinities between American migratory and resident birds probably increase the likelihood of parasite transmissi­on between migratory and resident hosts,” Svensson-Coelho said. Emerging diseases

One of the most striking difference­s between the 2007 survey and this one is that only two parasite lineages out of 250 in three genera were found in host birds from both Europe and Africa, compared with 13 of the 79 lineages of Plasmodium and Haemoprote­us detected in American resident birds.

“The role of migratory birds in dispersing these parasite lineages between temperate and tropical regions appears to be maximised in the Americas, possibly owing to the relatively short distances travelled by several species that winter in Central America and the Caribbean, or because of the taxonomic affinity of most American birds from temperate and tropical regions,” Svensson-Coelho said.

Avian malaria parasites are not transmissi­ble to humans, but migratory birds transport many other microorgan­isms, some of which are responsibl­e for emerging diseases.

West Nile virus, which originated in Africa, is one example of a pathogen that infects humans and that has been introduced to North America by migratory birds.

Another example is influenza: the virus is endemic and inoffensiv­e in migratory waterfowl such as ducks, geese and swans, but these birds are responsibl­e for spreading new lineages around the planet. – Agência FAPESP

 ??  ?? Bird species are exposed to different parasites in their boreal or temperate breeding areas and subtropica­l or tropical wintering areas, and they may disperse parasites between these areas. — Wikimedia Commons
Bird species are exposed to different parasites in their boreal or temperate breeding areas and subtropica­l or tropical wintering areas, and they may disperse parasites between these areas. — Wikimedia Commons
 ?? Reuters ?? The influenza virus is endemic and inoffensiv­e in in migratory waterfowl such as ducks, geese and swans, but these birds are responsibl­e for spreading new lineages around the planet.
Reuters The influenza virus is endemic and inoffensiv­e in in migratory waterfowl such as ducks, geese and swans, but these birds are responsibl­e for spreading new lineages around the planet.

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