Bird species involved in West Nile Virus epidemiological cycle in southern Québec

Thumbnail image

Download files

DOI

https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17124517

Language of the publication
English
Date
2020-06
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Taieb, Ludivine
  • Ludwig, Antoinette
  • Ogden, Nick H.
  • Lindsay, Robbin L.
  • Iranpour, Mahmood
  • Gagnon, Carl A.
  • Bicout, Dominique J.
Publisher
MPDI

Abstract

Despite many studies on West Nile Virus (WNV) in the US, including the reservoir role of bird species and the summer shifts of the Culex mosquito, feeding from birds to mammals, there have been few equivalent studies in the neighboring regions of Canada where WNV is endemic. Here, a priority list of bird species likely involved in WNV transmission in the greater Montréal area is constructed by combining three sources of data: (i) from WNV surveillance in wild birds (2002-2015); (ii) blood meal analysis of Culex pipiens-restuans (CPR), the primary enzootic vectors of WNV in the region, collected from surveillance in 2008 and 2014; (iii) literature review on the sero-prevalence/host competence of resident birds. Each of these data sources yielded 18, 23 and 53 species, and overall, 67 different bird species were identified as potential WNV amplifiers/reservoirs. Of those identified from CPR blood meals, Common starlings, American robins, Song sparrows and House sparrows ranked the highest and blood meal analysis demonstrated a seasonal shift in feed preference from birds to mammals by CPR. Our study indicates that there are broad similarities in the ecology of WNV between our region and the northeastern US, although the relative importance of bird species varies somewhat between regions.

Subject

  • Health,
  • Epidemiology,
  • Birds

Rights

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

PubMed ID
32585999
ISSN
1660-4601

Article

Journal title
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Journal volume
17
Journal issue
12
Article number
4517

Download(s)

URI

Collection(s)

Communicable diseases

Full item page

Full item page

Page details

Date modified: