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Does the virus cross the road? Viral phylogeographic patterns among bobcat populations reflect a history of urban development

机译:病毒是否过马路?山猫人群中的病毒神游模式反映了城市发展的历史

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摘要

Urban development has major impacts on connectivity among wildlife populations and is thus likely an important factor shaping pathogen transmission in wildlife. However, most investigations of wildlife diseases in urban areas focus on prevalence and infection risk rather than potential effects of urbanization on transmission itself. Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) is a directly transmitted retrovirus that infects many felid species and can be used as a model for studying pathogen transmission at landscape scales. We investigated phylogenetic relationships among FIV isolates sampled from five bobcat ( ) populations in coastal southern California that appear isolated due to major highways and dense urban development. Divergence dates among FIV phylogenetic lineages in several cases reflected historical urban growth and construction of major highways. We found strong FIV phylogeographic structure among three host populations north‐west of Los Angeles, largely coincident with host genetic structure. In contrast, relatively little FIV phylogeographic structure existed among two genetically distinct host populations south‐east of Los Angeles. Rates of FIV transfer among host populations did not vary significantly, with the lack of phylogenetic structure south‐east of Los Angeles unlikely to reflect frequent contemporary transmission among populations. Our results indicate that major barriers to host gene flow can also act as barriers to pathogen spread, suggesting potentially reduced susceptibility of fragmented populations to novel directly transmitted pathogens. Infrequent exchange of FIV among host populations suggests that populations would best be managed as distinct units in the event of a severe disease outbreak. Phylogeographic inference of pathogen transmission is useful for estimating the ability of geographic barriers to constrain disease spread and can provide insights into contemporary and historical drivers of host population connectivity.
机译:城市发展对野生动物种群之间的连通性产生重大影响,因此可能是野生动物中的重要因素塑造病原体传播。然而,城市地区野生动物疾病的大多数研究侧重于患病率和感染风险,而不是城市化对传播本身的潜在影响。猫免疫缺陷病毒(FIV)是一种直接传播的逆转录病毒,可感染许多富有物种,可以用作在景观尺度上学习病原体传递的模型。我们研究了从五个山猫()沿海南部加利福尼亚州的FIV分离物中取样的系统发育关系,由于主要的高速公路和密集的城市发展而出现孤立。几种案例中FIV系统发育谱系中的分歧日期反映了历史城市成长和主要高速公路的建设。我们在洛杉矶西北三个宿主人口中发现了强大的FIV Phylography结构,主要与宿主遗传结构一致。相比之下,洛杉矶东南两种遗传宿主人群中存在相对较小的FIV Phylogeography结构。举办宿主中的FIV转移率并没有显着变化,随着洛杉矶东南部的系统发育结构缺乏,不太可能反映人口中经常发生的当代传播。我们的研究结果表明,宿主基因流动的主要屏障也可以作为病原体传播的障碍,表明潜在地降低了片段化群体对新型透过的病原体的易感性。寄主人群中不常见的FIV交换表明,在发生严重的疾病爆发的情况下,人群将成为明显的单位。病原体传输的Phylopeopace推理可用于估计地理屏障对约束疾病的能力传播,并可以提供对宿主人口连通性的当代和历史驱动因素的见解。

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