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Bagaza virus and Plasmodium spp. coinfection in red-legged partridges (Alectoris rufa), in Southern Spain 2019.

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Date

2022-07-06

Authors

Höfle, Ursula
Cardona Cabrera, Teresa
Sanchez-Cano, Alberto
Fernandez de Mera, Isabel G
Risalde, Maria A
Moraga-Fernandez, Alberto
Ortiz, Jose Antonio

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Abstract

Flaviviruses such as West Nile (WNV), Usutu (USUV) and Bagaza (BAGV) virus and avian malaria parasites are vector borne pathogens that circulate naturally between avian and mosquito hosts. WNV and USUV and potentially also BAGV constitute zoonoses. Temporal and spatial cocirculation and coinfection with Plasmodium spp., and West Nile virus has been documented in birds and mosquito vectors, and fatally USUV-infected passerines coinfected with Plasmodium spp. had more severe lesions. Also, WNV, USUV and BAGV have been found to cocirculate. Yet little is known about the interaction of BAGV and malaria parasites during consecutive or coinfections of avian hosts. Here we report mortality of free-living red-legged partridges in a hunting estate in Southern Spain that were coinfected with BAGV and Plasmodium spp. The outbreak occurred in the area where BAGV first emerged in Europe in 2010 and where cocirculation of BAGV, USUV and WNV was confirmed in 2011 and 2013. Partridges were found dead in early October 2019. Birds had mottled locally pale pectoral muscles, enlarged, congestive greenish-black tinged livers and enlarged kidneys. Microscopically congestion and predominantly mononuclear inflammatory infiltrates were evident and Plasmodium phanerozoites were present in the liver, spleen, kidneys, muscle and skin. Molecular testing and sequencing detected Plasmodium spp. and BAGV in different tissues of the partridges, and immunohistochemistry confirmed the presence and colocalization of both pathogens in the liver and spleen. Due to the importance of the red-legged partridge in the ecosystem of the Iberian Peninsula and as driver of regional economy such mortalities are of concern. Such outbreaks may reflect climate change related shifts in host, vector and pathogen ecology and interactions that could emerge similarly for other pathogens.

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Animals
Bird diseases
Coinfection
Ecosystem
Flavivirus
Flavivirus infections
Galliformes
Plasmodium
Quail
Spain
West Nile fever
West Nile virus

DeCS Terms

Coinfección
Ecosistema
Enfermedades de las Aves
España
Fiebre del Nilo occidental
Infecciones por Flavivirus
Virus del Nilo occidental

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Keywords

Avian host, Avian malaria, Colocalization, Flavivirus

Citation

Höfle U, Cardona Cabrera T, Sánchez-Cano A, Fernández de Mera IG, Risalde MA, Moraga-Fernández A, et al. Bagaza virus and Plasmodium spp. coinfection in red-legged partridges (Alectoris rufa), in Southern Spain 2019. Transbound Emerg Dis. 2022 Sep;69(5):e3393-e3399