Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

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VerlorengezondheidM
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Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor VerlorengezondheidM » Ma 26 Okt 2015, 00:41

Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks and Pathogens Across the Gulf

An invasion of 19 million ticks. It might sound like the plot of a horror movie, but it’s real, and it happens every spring as migratory songbirds transport ticks — and the pathogens they carry — into the United States.

As covered previously on Cool Green Science, researchers from The Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center (SMBC) and Texas A&M University are trying to figure out just how many ticks and tick-borne pathogens neotropical songbirds are transporting from Central and South America during their annual migration.

And now they have an answer. Their results, recently published in Applied and Environmental Microbiology, reveal that neotropical songbirds are transporting an estimate of more than 19 million non-native ticks species into the country each year.

Hitching a Ride on the Wing

Millions of warblers, vireos, thrushes, and other neotropical songbirds migrate to the U.S. from Central and South America each year. After crossing the Gulf of Mexico in a single exhausting 18-to-24 hour flight, the birds often touch down at the first sight of land to rest and refuel. And that’s when the SMBC banding crew at the Conservancy’s Mad Island Marsh Preserve in Matagorda, Texas gets to work.


Bron: http://blog.nature.org/science/2015/10/ ... f-disease/
Laatst gewijzigd door VerlorengezondheidM op Vr 03 Feb 2017, 04:08, 3 keer totaal gewijzigd.
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Sproetje
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Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:33

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Sproetje » Do 29 Okt 2015, 16:29

Ik denk dat er ook wel andere vogels, buiten die zangvogels om, besmette teken meenemen overal naar toe.

De vogels houden zich niet aan landsgrenzen en teken (ook besmette teken) kunnen zo gemakkelijk kilometers ver reizen.

Sproetje
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Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:33

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Sproetje » Wo 04 Nov 2015, 16:02

Ik vond nog een onderzoek over het transport van besmette teken via vogels, het is een onderzoek uit Noorwegen:

Transport of Babesia venatorum-infected Ixodes ricinus to Norway by northward migrating passerine birds
Gunnar Hasle, Hans P Leinaas, Knut H Røed and Øivind Øines
2011

http://www.researchgate.net/publication ... rine_birds

ABSTRACT
Bovine babesiosis is regarded as a limited health problem for Norwegian cows, and the incidence has decreased markedly since the 1930's.
Rare cases of babesiosis in splenectomised humans from infection with Babesia divergens and B. venatorum have been described.
The objective of this study was to determine whether birds can introduce Babesia-infected ticks.
There are between 30 and 85 million passerine birds that migrate to Norway every spring.
Passerine birds were examined for ticks at four bird observatories along the southern Norwegian coast
during the spring migrations of 2003, 2004 and 2005.
The presence of Babesia was detected in the nymphs of Ixodes ricinus by real-time PCR
Povitive samples were confirmed using PCR, cloning and phylogenetic analyses.
[.....]


Results:
Of 512 ticks examined, real-time PCR revealed five to be positive (1.0%). Of these, four generated products that indicated the presence of
Babesia spp.; each of these were confirmed to be from Babesia venatorum (EU1).
Two of the four B. venatorum-positive ticks were caught from birds having an eastern migratory route (P< 0.001).
Conclusions:
Birds transport millions of ticks across the North Sea, the Skagerrak and the Kattegat every year. Thus, even with the low prevalence of
Babesia-infected ticks, a substantial number of infected ticks will be transported into Norway each year. Therefore, there is a continuous risk for introduction of new Babesia spp. into areas where I. ricinus can survive.

Sproetje
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Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:33

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Sproetje » Wo 04 Nov 2015, 19:52

Uit: Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology.

10 September 2013

http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/ ... 00048/full


Transport of ixodid ticks and tick-borne pathogens by migratory birds

Gunnar Hasle, University of Oslo, Blindern. Norway

Birds, particularly passerines, can be parasitized by Ixodid ticks, which may be infected with tick-borne pathogens, like Borrelia spp., Babesia spp., Anaplasma, Rickettsia/Coxiella, and tick-borne encephalitis virus. The prevalence of ticks on birds varies over years, season, locality and different bird species. The prevalence of ticks on different species depends mainly on the degree of feeding on the ground. In Europe, the Turdus spp., especially the blackbird, Turdus merula, appears to be most important for harboring ticks. Birds can easily cross barriers, like fences, mountains, glaciers, desserts and oceans, which would stop mammals, and they can move much faster than the wingless hosts. Birds can potentially transport tick-borne pathogens by transporting infected ticks, by being infected with tick-borne pathogens and transmit the pathogens to the ticks, and possibly act as hosts for transfer of pathogens between ticks through co-feeding. Knowledge of the bird migration routes and of the spatial distribution of tick species and tick-borne pathogens is crucial for understanding the possible impact of birds as spreaders of ticks and tick-borne pathogens. Successful colonization of new tick species or introduction of new tick-borne pathogens will depend on suitable climate, vegetation and hosts. Although it has never been demonstrated that a new tick species, or a new tick pathogen, actually has been established in a new locality after being seeded there by birds, evidence strongly suggests that this could occur.



There is ample evidence that birds, particularly passerines, can be parasitized by Ixodid ticks (Hoogstraal et al., 1961, 1963; Nuorteva and Hoogstraal, 1963; Anderson and Magnarelli, 1984; Mehl et al., 1984; Weisbrod and Johnson, 1989; Stafford et al., 1995; Olsen et al., 1995a; Nicholls and Callister, 1996; Smith et al., 1996; Ishiguro et al., 2000; Alekseev et al., 2001; Bjöersdorff et al., 2001; Scharf, 2004; Comstedt et al., 2006; Poupon et al., 2006; Ogden et al., 2008; Hasle et al. 2009). These ticks may be infected with tick-borne pathogens, like Borrelia spp. (Olsen et al., 1995a,b; Gylfe et al., 2000; Hanincova et al., 2003; Comstedt et al., 2006; Poupon et al., 2006; Ogden et al., 2008; Hasle et al. 2010; Kjelland et al., 2010; Franke et al., 2012; Socolovschi et al., 2012), Anaplasma spp. (Alekseev et al., 2001; Bjöersdorff et al., 2001; Daniels et al., 2002; Ogden et al., 2008; Franke et al., 2012), Babesia spp. (Hasle et al., 2011), Rickettsia/Coxiella (Elfving et al., 2010; Socolovschi et al., 2012) and Tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) (Waldenström et al., 2007; Geller et al., 2013).
[......]
Migrating bats can, like birds, cross barriers and move long distances in a short time, and could also have a potential of transporting ticks and tick-borne pathogens, like Bartonella, Borrelia spp. and members of the family Rickettsiales (Gill et al., 2008; Mühldorfer, 2013).


Although it has never been demonstrated that a new tick species, or a new tick pathogen, actually has been established in a new locality after being seeded there by birds, the evidence strongly suggests that this could happen. Hasle et al. (2009)
[......]


Transmission of a tick-borne pathogen through co-feeding has been demonstrated for the tick-borne encephalitis-virus (TBEV) on Myodes glareolus and Apodemus sylvaticus (Labuda and Randolph, 1999), but no data exists for such transmission of TBEV on birds. In Waldenström et al.'s material (2007) they found three TBEV-positive I. ricinius, one nymph and two larvae, on one individual European robin, Erithacus rubecula, which strongly suggests that the bird either was viremic or that transmission through co-feeding did occur.
[......]
I. persulcatus survives extreme winter temperatures in Siberia, and could possibly do that in Scandinavia as well. The findings of I. persulcatus and human cases with S-TBEV in Kokkola (N63°50′ E23°07′), Finland, several hundred kilometres from the known western distribution range of I. persulcatus (Jääskeläinen et al., 2006), suggests long distance transport by birds.

Sproetje
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Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:33

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Sproetje » Do 12 Nov 2015, 17:31

The Establishment of a Blacklegged Tick Population by Migratory Songbirds in Ontario, Canada


Januari 2014
ilads/education papers

http://www.ilads.org/education/papers/j ... 1-2014.pdf

Abstract
This 2-year study implicates migratory songbirds in the initiation of an inland Lyme disease endemic area in southeastern Ontario. The spirochetal bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato Johnson, Schmid, Hyde, Steigerwalt & Brenner, which causes Lyme disease, was detected in blacklegged ticks, Ixodes scapularis Say, collected by flagging. Based on PCR amplification, 19 (33.3%) of 57 I. scapularis adults (males, females) were infected with B. burgdorferi. Since transovarial transmission of B. burgdorferi is nil in I. scapularis and white-tailed deer. Odocoileus virginianus Zimmermann, are not reservoir-competent hosts, we suggest that songbirds are the mode of introduction of B. burgdorferi-infected I. scapularis. All of the natural abiotic and biotic attributes are present to establish a Lyme disease endemic area. Blacklegged ticks survived the winter successfully at the epicentre. We provide substantial evidence that migratory songbirds initially introduced Lyme disease vector ticks and B. burgdorferi spirochetes to this remote woodland habitat and initiated an established population of blacklegged ticks.

Introduction The blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis Say (Ixodida: Ixodidae), is the primary vector of the Lyme disease-spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (s.l.) Johnson, Schmid, Hyde, Steigerwalt & Brenner, east of the Rocky Mountains [1]. This blood-sucking, ixodid ectoparasite feeds on at least 144 different vertebrates (avian, mammalian, reptilian), including humans, and domestic and wildlife animals [2,3]. Immatures (larvae, nymphs) of I. scapularis parasitize at least 76 different bird species, especially passerines (Order: Passeriformes), primarily perching birds (songbirds) [4-11]. This tick species has been collected from migratory songbirds as far west and north as the town of Slave Lake, Alberta [7] and, similarly, a B. burgdorferi-positive I. scapularis nymph was detached from a passerine migrant in central Saskatchewan (Tweedsmuir, SK) [3].
(...)
The fact that wild birds are reservoir hosts of B. burgdorferi sensu lato is clearly recognized around the world [74]. Not only do tickinfested passerine migrants act as a bioresource in introducing B. burgdorferi-infected ticks, they have the reservoir capacity to transmit spirochetes during the tick-host blood meal. Additionally, avian hosts can act as genetic mixing bowls for diverse strains of Lyme disease spirochetes, and may precipitate the exchange of Borrelia genes, such as cross-species recombinant genotypes [74].
(...)


Canada heeft er wel last van.
In ieder geval van de Ixodes Scapularis die met migrerende vogels meelift, deze teken zijn ook besmet met Borrelia burgdorferi ss.

Eus
Berichten: 992
Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 23:27

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Eus » Do 12 Nov 2015, 18:15

Afbeelding

Musje met teek, bron; Facebook Stichting Tekenbeetziekten. Het musje is vrij snel na de vondst overleden, onbekend of de teek daarmee te maken had.


tulpje
Berichten: 94
Lid geworden op: Zo 09 Nov 2014, 20:32

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor tulpje » Do 12 Nov 2015, 23:10

Zelfs bewoners van het noordelijk en zuidelijk halfrond ontkomen er niet meer aan!



First detection of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato DNA in king penguins


Abstract

The hard tick Ixodes uriae parasitises a wide range of seabird species in the circumpolar areas of both Northern and Southern hemispheres and has been shown to be infected with Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato, the bacterial agents of Lyme borreliosis. Although it is assumed that seabirds represent viable reservoir hosts, direct demonstrations of infection are limited to a single study from the Northern hemisphere. Here, the blood of 50 tick-infested adult king penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus halli) breeding in the Crozet Archipelago (Southern Indian Ocean) was examined for B. burgdorferi sl exposure by serology and for spirochetemia by in vitro DNA amplification. Four birds were found positive by serology, whereas B. burgdorferi sl DNA was detected in two other birds. Our data therefore provide the first direct proof of Borrelia burgdorferi sl spirochetes in seabirds of the Southern hemisphere and indicate a possible reservoir role for king penguins in the natural maintenance of this bacterium. Although the bacterial genetic diversity present in these hosts and the infectious period for tick vectors remain to be elucidated, our results add to a growing body of knowledge on the contribution of seabirds to the complex epizootiology of Lyme disease and the global dissemination of B. burgdorferi sl spirochetes.



Bron: Pubmed
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25150726

Sproetje
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Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:33

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Sproetje » Vr 20 Nov 2015, 19:59

In Portugal zijn de vogels dragers van Borrelia:
2013

http://www.pravdareport.com/science/tec ... y_birds-0/

The blackbird is a major reservoir host of the bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi s.l., responsible for Lyme disease - a disease that, if not treated at an early stage, causes severe lesions in the neurological, dermatological and articular systems.

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Lola Lyme
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Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:53

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Lola Lyme » Di 24 Nov 2015, 23:29

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Laatst gewijzigd door Lola Lyme op Wo 04 Jul 2018, 15:40, 1 keer totaal gewijzigd.
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