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Martin Gilbert
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Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Journal of Wildlife Diseases (2021) 57 (2): 464–466.
Published: 11 February 2021
Abstract
ABSTRACT Canine distemper virus (CDV) is recognized as a conservation threat to Amur tigers ( Panthera tigris altaica ) in Russia, but the risk to other subspecies remains unknown. We detected CDV neutralizing antibodies in nine of 21 wild-caught Sumatran tigers (42.9%), including one sampled on the day of capture, confirming exposure in the wild.
Journal Articles
Nadezhda S. Sulikhan, Martin Gilbert, Ekaterina Yu. Blidchenko, Sergei V. Naidenko, Galina V. Ivanchuk ...
Journal:
Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Journal of Wildlife Diseases (2018) 54 (1): 170–174.
Published: 01 January 2018
Abstract
ABSTRACT The critically endangered population of Far Eastern leopards ( Panthera pardus orientalis ) may number as few as 60 individuals and is at risk from stochastic processes such as infectious disease. During May 2015, a case of canine distemper virus (CDV) was diagnosed in a wild leopard exhibiting severe neurologic disease in the Russian territory of Primorskii Krai. Amplified sequences of the CDV hemagglutinin gene and phosphoprotein gene aligned within the Arctic-like clade of CDV, which includes viruses from elsewhere in Russia, China, Europe, and North America. Histologic examination of cerebral tissue revealed perivascular lymphoid cuffing and demyelination of the white matter consistent with CDV infection. Neutralizing antibodies against CDV were detected in archived serum from two wild Far Eastern leopards sampled during 1993–94, confirming previous exposure in the population. This leopard population is likely too small to maintain circulation of CDV, suggesting that infections arise from spillover from more-abundant domestic or wild carnivore reservoirs. Increasing the population size and establishment of additional populations of leopards would be important steps toward securing the future of this subspecies and reducing the risk posed by future outbreaks of CDV or other infectious diseases.
Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Journal of Wildlife Diseases (2016) 52 (3): 682–687.
Published: 01 July 2016
Abstract
Avian hemosporidian parasites have been detected in Asia, but little information is known about the hemosporidian parasite lineages that circulate in waterbirds that migrate along the East Asian and Central Asian migratory flyways to breed in Mongolia. To gather baseline data on hemosporidian parasite presence in Mongolian waterbirds, 151 blood-spot samples (81 hatch year [HY] and 70 after hatch year [AHY]) from Bar-headed Goose ( Anser indicus ), Ruddy Shelduck ( Tadorna ferruginea ), Great Cormorant ( Phalacrocorax carbo ), and Mongolian Gull ( Larus mongolicus ) were screened for three genera of apicomplexan parasites, Plasmodium , Haemoproteus , and Leucocytozoon , using nested PCR. Of these, 17 samples (11%, 95% confidence interval: 7.1–17.4%), representing all four species, were positive. We identified 10 species (six Plasmodium , one Haemoproteus , and three Leucocytozoon ) through mitochondrial DNA sequencing of the cytochrome b gene and BLAST analysis. One lineage shared 100% nucleotide identity to a hemosporidian parasite lineage that has been previously identified as Plasmodium relictum (SGS1). Six lineages were found in AHY birds and five in HY birds, the latter confirming that infection with some of the identified hemosporidian parasites occurred on the breeding grounds. Our data provide important baseline information on hemosporidian parasite lineages found in AHY waterbirds that breed and migrate through Mongolia as well as in HY offspring.
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Journal of Wildlife Diseases (2012) 48 (3): 768–775.
Published: 01 July 2012
Abstract
Wild waterbirds sampled July 2006–September 2009 in Mongolia were tested for antibodies to avian influenza (AI) virus with the use of a commercially available blocking enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Antibodies were detected in 25% (572/2,282) of tested birds representing 26 species, and all antibody-positive samples were from 12 species in the orders Anseriformes and Charadriiformes. The highest antibody prevalence was in Ruddy Shelducks ( Tadorna ferruginea ; 61.7%; n =261; 95% confidence interval [CI] 55.8–67.6%), Whooper Swans ( Cygnus cygnus ; 38.4%; n =242; 95% CI 32.3–44.5%), Swan Geese ( Anser cygnoides ; 15%; n =127; 95% CI 8.6–21.4%), Bar-headed Geese ( Anser indicus ; 13%; n =738; 95% CI 10.3–15.1%), and Mongolian Gulls ( Larus mongolicus ; 3.9%; n =255; 95% CI 1.3–6.5%). There was no significant temporal or spatial variation in the presence of antibodies in the sampled species. However, Bar-headed Geese and Mongolian Gulls showed spatial variation in antibody prevalence in 2007 and 2008, respectively. Our study provides insights into the hatch year waterbirds' exposure to AI virus at their natal and molting sites in Mongolia.
Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Journal of Wildlife Diseases (2012) 48 (1): 195–200.
Published: 01 January 2012
Abstract
Given a paucity of data on the occurrence of avian influenza viruses (AIVs) in wild passerines and other small terrestrial species in Southeast Asia and the importance of highly pathogenic Asian-strain H5N1 outbreaks in humans and domestic poultry in these areas, we focused on surveillance for influenza A viral nucleic acids and antibodies for AIVs in wildcaught birds in northern Vietnam. Four of 197 serum samples collected in 2007 from Black-crested Bulbul ( Pycnonotus melanicterus ), Crow-billed Drongo ( Dicrurus annectans ), Buff-breasted Babbler ( Pellorneum tickelli ), and Black-browed Fulvetta ( Alcippe grotei ) were antibody positive for the H5 subtype. Fourteen of 193 samples collected in 2008 were positive for the influenza A viral M gene by real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. These included samples from 10 Japanese White-eyes ( Zosterops japonicus ), two Puff-throated Bulbuls ( Alophoixus pallidus ), one White-tailed Robin ( Cinclidium leucurum ), and one Striped Titbabbler ( Macronous gularis ). Almost all positive samples were from bird species that forage in flocks, including Japanese White-eyes with an unusually high prevalence of 14.9%. We collected samples from birds from three habitat types but detected no strong pattern in prevalence. Our results suggest that attention should be given to terrestrial species, particularly flocking passerines, in AIV surveillance and monitoring programs.
Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Journal of Wildlife Diseases (2005) 41 (4): 707–716.
Published: 01 October 2005
Abstract
Oriental white-backed vultures ( Gyps bengalensis ; OWBVs) died of renal failure when they ingested diclofenac, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), in tissues of domestic livestock. Acute necrosis of proximal convoluted tubules in these vultures was severe. Glomeruli, distal convoluted tubules, and collecting tubules were relatively spared in the vultures that had early lesions. In most vultures, however, lesions became extensive with large urate aggregates obscuring renal architecture. Inflammation was minimal. Extensive urate precipitation on the surface and within organ parenchyma (visceral gout) was consistently found in vultures with renal failure. Very little is known about the physiologic effect of NSAIDs in birds. Research in mammals has shown that diclofenac inhibits formation of prostaglandins. We propose that the mechanism by which diclofenac induces renal failure in the OWBV is through the inhibition of the modulating effect of prostaglandin on angiotensin II-mediated adrenergic stimulation. Renal portal valves open in response to adrenergic stimulation, redirecting portal blood to the caudal vena cava and bypassing the kidney. If diclofenac removes a modulating effect of prostaglandins on the renal portal valves, indiscriminant activation of these valves would redirect the primary nutrient blood supply away from the renal cortex. Resulting ischemic necrosis of the cortical proximal convoluted tubules would be consistent with our histologic findings in these OWBVs.