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首页> 外文期刊>Ecology and Evolution >Effects of a zoonotic pathogen, Borrelia burgdorferi , on the behavior of a key reservoir host
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Effects of a zoonotic pathogen, Borrelia burgdorferi , on the behavior of a key reservoir host

机译:人畜共患病病原体伯氏疏螺旋体对关键水库宿主行为的影响

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Most emerging infectious diseases of humans are transmitted to humans from other animals. The transmission of these “zoonotic” pathogens is affected by the abundance and behavior of their wildlife hosts. However, the effects of infection with zoonotic pathogens on behavior of wildlife hosts, particularly those that might propagate through ecological communities, are not well understood. Borrelia burgdorferi is a bacterium that causes Lyme disease, the most common vector‐borne disease in the USA and Europe. In its North American range, the pathogen is most frequently transmitted among hosts through the bite of infected blacklegged ticks ( Ixodes scapularis ). Using sham and true vaccines, we experimentally manipulated infection load with this zoonotic pathogen in its most competent wildlife reservoir host, the white‐footed mouse, Peromyscus leucopus , and quantified the effects of infection on mouse foraging behavior, as well as levels of mouse infestation with ticks. Mice treated with the true vaccine had 20% fewer larval blacklegged ticks infesting them compared to mice treated with the sham vaccine, a significant difference. We observed a nonsignificant trend for mice treated with the true vaccine to be more likely to visit experimental foraging trays (20%–30% effect size) and to prey on gypsy moth pupae (5%–20% effect size) compared to mice treated with the sham vaccine. We observed no difference between mice on true‐ versus sham‐vaccinated grids in risk‐averse foraging. Infection with this zoonotic pathogen appears to elicit behavioral changes that might reduce self‐grooming, but other behaviors were affected subtly or not at all. High titers of B.?burgdorferi in mice could elicit a self‐reinforcing feedback loop in which reduced grooming increases tick burdens and hence exposure to tick‐borne pathogens.
机译:人类大多数新出现的传染病是从其他动物传染给人类的。这些“动物病”病原体的传播受到其野生动物宿主的丰度和行为的影响。然而,人畜共患病病原体感染对野生生物寄主行为的影响,特别是那些可能通过生态群落传播的行为,尚未得到很好的了解。伯氏疏螺旋体是引起莱姆病的细菌,莱姆病是美国和欧洲最常见的媒介传播疾病。在其北美范围内,病原体最常通过被感染的黑脚((Ixodes scapularis)叮咬而在宿主之间传播。我们使用假疫苗和真疫苗,通过实验控制了这种人畜共患病原体在其最称职的野生动物宿主中的感染负荷,即白足小鼠白斑病菌,并定量分析了感染对小鼠觅食行为以及小鼠侵染水平的影响。带有刻度。与用假疫苗处理的小鼠相比,用真疫苗处理的小鼠的幼虫黑腿leg虫感染少了20%。我们观察到,用真疫苗治疗的小鼠与治疗过的小鼠相比,没有出现更显着的趋势,即更可能访问实验性觅食盘(效应大小为20%–30%)并捕食吉卜赛蛾p(效应大小为5%–20%)。用假疫苗。我们观察到,在真避险和假接种网格上的小鼠在规避风险的觅食方面没有差异。感染这种人畜共患病病原体似乎会引起行为改变,这可能会减少自我梳理,但其他行为受到的影响却微乎其微或根本没有受到影响。小鼠中高滴度的B.?burgdorferi可能会引发自我强化的反馈回路,其中减少的梳理会增加reduced的负担,并因此而暴露于tick传播的病原体。

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