Blood meal analysis reveals sources of tick-borne pathogens and differences in host utilization of juvenile Ixodes ricinus across urban and sylvatic habitats

IF 2.4 2区 农林科学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Zoonoses and Public Health Pub Date : 2024-03-14 DOI:10.1111/zph.13124
Jani Jukka Sormunen, Jesse Mänttäri, Eero Juhani Vesterinen, Tero Klemola
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Abstract

Aims

Urban green spaces are locations of maximal human activity, forming areas of enhanced risk for tick-borne disease (TBD) transmission. Being also limited in spatial scale, green spaces form prime targets for control schemes aiming to reduce TBD risk. However, for effective control, the key species maintaining local tick and tick-borne pathogen (TBP) populations must be identified. To determine how patterns of host utilization vary spatially, we utilized blood meal analysis to study the contributions of voles, shrews, squirrels, leporids and cervids towards blood meals and the acquisition of TBPs of juvenile Ixodes ricinus in urban and sylvatic areas in Finland.

Methods and Results

A total of 1084 nymphs were collected from the capital city of Finland, Helsinki and from a sylvatic island in southwestern Finland, and subjected to qPCR analysis to identify DNA remnants of the previous host. We found significant differences in host contributions between urban and sylvatic environments. Specifically, squirrels and leporids were more common hosts in urban habitats, whereas cervids and voles were more common in sylvatic habitats. In addition to providing 18.4% of larval blood meals in urban habitats, red squirrels were identified as the source of 28.6% (n = 48) of Borrelia afzelii detections and 58.1% (n = 18) of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto detections, indicating an important role for local enzootic cycles.

Conclusions

Our study highlights that the key hosts maintaining tick and TBP populations may be different in urban and sylvatic habitats. Likewise, hosts generally perceived as important for upkeep may have limited importance in urban environments. Consequently, targeting control schemes based on off-site data of host importance may lead to suboptimal results.

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血粉分析揭示了蜱传病原体的来源以及城市和草原栖息地中幼年蓖麻线虫宿主利用率的差异。
目的:城市绿地是人类活动最多的地方,也是蜱媒疾病(TBD)传播风险较高的区域。绿地的空间尺度也有限,因此成为旨在降低蜱传疾病风险的控制计划的主要目标。然而,为了有效控制,必须确定维持当地蜱虫和蜱虫病原体(TBP)种群的关键物种。为了确定宿主利用模式在空间上的差异,我们利用血餐分析法研究了芬兰城市和森林地区田鼠、鼩鼱、松鼠、leporids和ervids对蓖麻幼虫血餐和TBPs获取的贡献:从芬兰首都赫尔辛基和芬兰西南部的一个森林岛屿上共采集了1084只若虫,并对其进行了qPCR分析,以确定前宿主的DNA残留。我们发现,城市环境和雪原环境中的宿主贡献率存在明显差异。具体来说,松鼠和leporids是城市栖息地中更常见的宿主,而ervids和田鼠则是森林栖息地中更常见的宿主。除了在城市栖息地提供18.4%的幼虫血餐外,红松鼠还被确定为28.6%(n = 48)的阿夫泽尔伊波氏杆菌检测结果和58.1%(n = 18)的严格意义上的布氏杆菌检测结果的来源,这表明红松鼠在当地流行病循环中发挥着重要作用:我们的研究表明,维持蜱虫和结核杆菌种群的关键宿主在城市栖息地和草原栖息地可能有所不同。同样,通常被认为是重要的维护宿主在城市环境中的重要性可能有限。因此,根据寄主重要性的非现场数据来制定有针对性的控制计划可能会导致不理想的结果。
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来源期刊
Zoonoses and Public Health
Zoonoses and Public Health 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
4.20%
发文量
115
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Zoonoses and Public Health brings together veterinary and human health researchers and policy-makers by providing a venue for publishing integrated and global approaches to zoonoses and public health. The Editors will consider papers that focus on timely collaborative and multi-disciplinary research in zoonoses and public health. This journal provides rapid publication of original papers, reviews, and potential discussion papers embracing this collaborative spirit. Papers should advance the scientific knowledge of the sources, transmission, prevention and control of zoonoses and be authored by scientists with expertise in areas such as microbiology, virology, parasitology and epidemiology. Articles that incorporate recent data into new methods, applications, or approaches (e.g. statistical modeling) which enhance public health are strongly encouraged.
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