Ranavirus and helminth parasite co-infection in invasive American bullfrogs in the Atlantic forest, Brazil

Lauren V. Ash , Karla Magalhães Campião , Cauê Pinheiro Teixeira , Nicholas J. Gotelli
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Abstract

Emerging infectious diseases threaten amphibian species across the globe. In Brazil, the American bullfrog (Aquarana catesbeiana) is a highly invasive species that can potentially transmit parasites and pathogens to native amphibians. This is the first assessment of co-infection of Ranavirus and helminth macroparasites in invasive populations of bullfrogs in South America. We collected, measured, and euthanized 65 specimens of A. catesbeiana sampled from 9 sites across three states of Brazil in the Atlantic Forest biome. We collected and identified helminth macroparasites and sampled host liver tissue to test for the presence and load of Ranavirus with quantitative PCR. We documented patterns of prevalence, parasite load, and co-infection with generalized linear mixed models, generalized logistic regressions, and randomization tests. Most individual bullfrogs did not exhibit clinical signs of infection, but the overall Ranavirus prevalence was 27% (95% confidence interval, [CI 17–38]). Bullfrogs were infected with helminth macroparasites from 5 taxa. Co-infection of helminth macroparasites and Ranavirus was also common (21% CI [12–31]). Bullfrog size was positively correlated with total macroparasite abundance and richness, and the best-fitting model included a significant interaction between bullfrog size and Ranavirus infection status. We observed a negative correlation between Ranavirus viral load and nematode abundance (slope = −0.22, P = 0.03). Invasive bullfrogs (A. catesbeiana) in Brazil were frequently infected with both Ranavirus and helminth macroparasites, so adult bullfrogs could serve as reservoir hosts for both pathogens and parasites. However, many macroparasites collected were encysted and not developing. Coinfection patterns suggest a potential interaction between Ranavirus and macroparasites because helminth abundance increased with bullfrog size but was lower in Ranavirus infected individuals. Future studies of bullfrogs in the Atlantic Forest should investigate their potential role in pathogen and parasite transmission to native anurans.

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巴西大西洋森林中外来美洲牛蛙的瘤胃病毒和蠕虫寄生虫合并感染情况
新出现的传染病威胁着全球的两栖动物物种。在巴西,美洲牛蛙(Aquarana catesbeiana)是一种高度入侵物种,有可能向本地两栖动物传播寄生虫和病原体。这是首次评估南美洲牛蛙入侵种群中拉尼亚病毒和蠕虫类大型寄生虫的共同感染情况。我们从巴西大西洋森林生物群落三个州的 9 个地点收集、测量并安乐死了 65 只 A. catesbeiana 牛蛙标本。我们收集并鉴定了蠕虫类大型寄生虫,并对宿主肝脏组织进行取样,通过定量 PCR 检测瘤胃病毒的存在和载量。我们用广义线性混合模型、广义逻辑回归和随机化检验记录了流行率、寄生虫量和合并感染的模式。大多数牛蛙个体没有表现出感染的临床症状,但总体的拉纳病毒感染率为 27%(95% 置信区间 [CI 17-38])。牛蛙感染了 5 个类群的蠕虫大寄生虫。同时感染蠕虫类大型寄生虫和瘤胃病毒的情况也很常见(21% CI [12-31])。牛蛙的体型与大型寄生虫的总丰度和丰富度呈正相关,最佳拟合模型包括牛蛙体型与瘤胃病毒感染状况之间的显著交互作用。我们观察到 Ranavirus 病毒载量与线虫丰度之间存在负相关(斜率 = -0.22,P = 0.03)。巴西的入侵牛蛙(A. catesbeiana)经常感染拉纳病毒和蠕虫类大型寄生虫,因此成年牛蛙可能是病原体和寄生虫的宿主。不过,收集到的许多大型寄生虫都有包囊,没有发育。共感染模式表明,Ranavirus 和大型寄生虫之间可能存在相互作用,因为随着牛蛙体型的增大,蠕虫的数量也随之增加,但在感染 Ranavirus 的个体中蠕虫的数量较少。今后对大西洋森林中的牛蛙进行研究时,应调查它们在病原体和寄生虫传播给本地无尾类动物中的潜在作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
5.60%
发文量
113
审稿时长
45 days
期刊介绍: The International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife (IJP-PAW) publishes the results of original research on parasites of all wildlife, invertebrate and vertebrate. This includes free-ranging, wild populations, as well as captive wildlife, semi-domesticated species (e.g. reindeer) and farmed populations of recently domesticated or wild-captured species (e.g. cultured fishes). Articles on all aspects of wildlife parasitology are welcomed including taxonomy, biodiversity and distribution, ecology and epidemiology, population biology and host-parasite relationships. The impact of parasites on the health and conservation of wildlife is seen as an important area covered by the journal especially the potential role of environmental factors, for example climate. Also important to the journal is ''one health'' and the nature of interactions between wildlife, people and domestic animals, including disease emergence and zoonoses.
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