Migratory patterns of two major influenza virus host species on tropical islands

Archive ouverte

Lebarbenchon, Camille | Boucher, Solenn | Feare, Chris | Dietrich, Muriel | Larose, Christine | Humeau, Laurence | Le Corre, Matthieu | Jaeger, Audrey

Edité par CCSD ; The Royal Society -

International audience. Animal migration is a major driver of infectious agent dispersal. Duck and seabird migrations, for instance, play a key role in the spatial transmission dynamics and gene flow of avian influenza viruses (AIV), worldwide. On tropical islands, brown and lesser noddies ( Anous stolidus and Anous tenuirostris ) may be important AIV hosts, but the lack of knowledge on their migratory behaviour limits our understanding of virus circulation in island networks. Here we show that high connectivity between islands generated by non-breeding dispersive behaviours may be a major driver in the spread and the maintenance of AIV among tropical islands of the western Indian Ocean. Tracking data highlight two types of dispersive behaviours during the non-breeding season: birds either staying in the vicinity of their breeding ground (on Bird Island, Seychelles), or moving to and roosting on other islands in the western Indian Ocean. Migrant birds used a wide range of roosting places from the Tanzanian coasts to the Maldives archipelago and Tromelin Island. Epidemiological data confirm that brown and lesser noddies are major hosts for AIV, although significant variations of seroprevalence between species suggest that other biological and ecological drivers could be involved in virus infection and transmission dynamics.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Geolocation Reveals Year-Round at-Sea Distribution and Activity of a Superabundant Tropical Seabird, the Sooty Tern Onychoprion fuscatus

Archive ouverte | Jaeger, Audrey | CCSD

International audience. Migration is a fundamental aspect of the ecology and evolutionary history of many animals, driven by seasonal changes in resource availability and habitat structure. Seabird migration has bee...

Exposure of pelagic seabirds to Toxoplasma gondii in the Western Indian Ocean points to an open sea dispersal of this terrestrial parasite

Archive ouverte | Poulle, Marie-Lazarine | CCSD

International audience. Toxoplasma gondii is a protozoan parasite that uses felids as definitive hosts and warm-blooded animals as intermediate hosts. While the dispersal of T . gondii infectious oocysts from land t...

Tracking seabird migration in the tropical Indian Ocean reveals basin-scale conservation need

Archive ouverte | Trevail, Alice | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...