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Influence of Host Ecology and Behavior on Campylobacter jejuni Prevalence and Environmental Contamination Risk in a Synanthropic Wild Bird Species

机译:寄主生态和行为对空生弯曲杆菌流行和环境污染风险的一种野生人类鸟类。

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Campylobacter jejuni is a foodborne pathogen that often leads to human infections through the consumption of contaminated poultry. Wild birds may play a role in the transmission of C. jejuni by acting as reservoir hosts. Despite ample evidence that wild birds harbor C. jejuni , few studies have addressed the role of host ecology in transmission to domestic animals or humans. We tested the hypothesis that host social behavior and habitat play a major role in driving transmission risk. C. jejuni infection and host ecology were studied simultaneously in wild American crows ( Corvus brachyrhynchos ) in Davis, CA, over 3 years. We found that 178 of 337 samples tested were culture positive (53%), with infection varying by season and host age. Among adult crows, infection rates were highest during the winter, when migrants return and crows form large communal roosts. Nestlings had the highest risk of infection, and whole-genome sequencing supports the observation of direct transmission between nestlings. We deployed global positioning system (GPS) receivers to quantify habitat use by crows; space use was nonrandom, with crows preferentially occupying some habitats while avoiding others. This behavior drastically amplified the risk of environmental contamination from feces in specific locations. This study demonstrates that social behavior contributes to infection within species and that habitat use leads to a heterogeneous risk of cross-species transmission.IMPORTANCE Campylobacter jejuni is the most common cause of gastroenteritis in industrialized countries. Despite efforts to reduce the colonization of poultry flocks and eventual infection of humans, the incidence of human C. jejuni infection has remained high. Because wild birds can harbor strains of C. jejuni that eventually infect humans, there has long been speculation that wild birds might act as an important reservoir in the C. jejuni infection cycle. We simultaneously studied infection prevalence, social behavior, and movement ecology in wild American crows ( Corvus brachyrhynchos ). We found that social behavior contributed to patterns of infection and that movement behavior resulted in some areas having a high risk of transmission while others had a low risk. The incorporation of ecological data into studies of C. jejuni in wild birds has the potential to resolve when and how wild birds contribute to domestic animal and human C. jejuni infection, leading to better control of initial poultry contamination.
机译:空肠弯曲菌是一种食源性病原体,通常通过食用受污染的家禽而导致人类感染。野生鸟类可能通过充当水库宿主在空肠弯曲杆菌的传播中发挥作用。尽管有足够的证据表明野生鸟类携带空肠弯曲杆菌,但很少有研究探讨宿主生态系统在向家畜或人类传播中的作用。我们检验了以下假设:主持人的社会行为和栖息地在推动传播风险中起主要作用。在加利福尼亚州戴维斯市的野生美洲乌鸦(Corvus brachyrhynchos)中,历时3年同时研究了空肠弯曲菌感染和宿主生态。我们发现测试的337个样本中有178个为培养阳性(53%),感染随季节和寄主年龄而变化。在成年乌鸦中,冬季感染率最高,这时移徙者返回并且乌鸦形成大型公共栖息地。雏鸟的感染风险最高,全基因组测序支持观察雏鸟之间的直接传播。我们部署了全球定位系统(GPS)接收器,以量化乌鸦对栖息地的利用;空间使用不是随机的,乌鸦优先占据某些栖息地,而避开其他栖息地。这种行为极大地放大了特定地点粪便污染环境的风险。这项研究表明,社会行为助长了物种内的感染,栖息地的使用导致了跨物种传播的异质性风险。重要空肠弯曲菌是工业化国家胃肠炎的最常见原因。尽管努力减少家禽群的定殖并最终感染人类,但空肠弯曲杆菌感染的发生率仍然很高。由于野生鸟类可以携带最终感染人类的​​空肠弯曲杆菌菌株,因此长期以来人们一直猜测野生鸟类可能在空肠弯曲杆菌感染周期中起重要的储存作用。我们同时研究了野生美洲乌鸦(Corvus brachyrhynchos)的感染率,社会行为和运动生态。我们发现社会行为助长了感染模式,运动行为导致某些地区具有高传播风险,而其他地区则具有低风险。将生态学数据纳入野生鸟类空肠弯曲杆菌的研究中,有可能解决野生鸟类何时以及如何造成家畜和人空肠弯曲杆菌感染,从而更好地控制初始家禽污染。

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