The ecology and age structure of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus outbreak in wild mute swans.

The first UK epizootic of highly pathogenic (HP) H5N1 influenza in wild birds occurred in 2008, in a population of mute swans that had been the subject of ornithological study for decades. Here we use an innovative combination of ornithological, phylogenetic and immunological approaches to investiga...

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Main Authors: Pybus, O, Perrins, C, Choudhury, B, Manvell, R, Nunez, A, Schulenburg, B, Sheldon, B, Brown, I
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2012
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author Pybus, O
Perrins, C
Choudhury, B
Manvell, R
Nunez, A
Schulenburg, B
Sheldon, B
Brown, I
author_facet Pybus, O
Perrins, C
Choudhury, B
Manvell, R
Nunez, A
Schulenburg, B
Sheldon, B
Brown, I
author_sort Pybus, O
collection OXFORD
description The first UK epizootic of highly pathogenic (HP) H5N1 influenza in wild birds occurred in 2008, in a population of mute swans that had been the subject of ornithological study for decades. Here we use an innovative combination of ornithological, phylogenetic and immunological approaches to investigate the ecology and age structure of HP H5N1 in nature. We screened samples from swans and waterbirds using PCR and sequenced HP H5N1-positive samples. The outbreak's origin was investigated by linking bird count data with a molecular clock analysis of sampled virus sequences. We used ringing records to reconstruct the age-structure of outbreak mortality, and we estimated the age distribution of prior exposure to avian influenza. Outbreak mortality was low and all HP H5N1-positive mute swans in the affected population were <3 years old. Only the youngest age classes contained an appreciable number of individuals with no detectable antibody responses to viral nucleoprotein. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the outbreak strain circulated locally for ~1 month before detection and arrived when the immigration rate of migrant waterbirds was highest. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that HP H5N1 epizootics in wild swans exhibit limited mortality due to immune protection arising from previous exposure. Our study population may represent a valuable resource for investigating the natural ecology and epidemiology of avian influenza.
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spelling oxford-uuid:477be1dd-d439-4089-b9cc-2c31f522e78e2022-03-26T15:20:21ZThe ecology and age structure of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus outbreak in wild mute swans.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:477be1dd-d439-4089-b9cc-2c31f522e78eEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2012Pybus, OPerrins, CChoudhury, BManvell, RNunez, ASchulenburg, BSheldon, BBrown, IThe first UK epizootic of highly pathogenic (HP) H5N1 influenza in wild birds occurred in 2008, in a population of mute swans that had been the subject of ornithological study for decades. Here we use an innovative combination of ornithological, phylogenetic and immunological approaches to investigate the ecology and age structure of HP H5N1 in nature. We screened samples from swans and waterbirds using PCR and sequenced HP H5N1-positive samples. The outbreak's origin was investigated by linking bird count data with a molecular clock analysis of sampled virus sequences. We used ringing records to reconstruct the age-structure of outbreak mortality, and we estimated the age distribution of prior exposure to avian influenza. Outbreak mortality was low and all HP H5N1-positive mute swans in the affected population were <3 years old. Only the youngest age classes contained an appreciable number of individuals with no detectable antibody responses to viral nucleoprotein. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the outbreak strain circulated locally for ~1 month before detection and arrived when the immigration rate of migrant waterbirds was highest. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that HP H5N1 epizootics in wild swans exhibit limited mortality due to immune protection arising from previous exposure. Our study population may represent a valuable resource for investigating the natural ecology and epidemiology of avian influenza.
spellingShingle Pybus, O
Perrins, C
Choudhury, B
Manvell, R
Nunez, A
Schulenburg, B
Sheldon, B
Brown, I
The ecology and age structure of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus outbreak in wild mute swans.
title The ecology and age structure of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus outbreak in wild mute swans.
title_full The ecology and age structure of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus outbreak in wild mute swans.
title_fullStr The ecology and age structure of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus outbreak in wild mute swans.
title_full_unstemmed The ecology and age structure of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus outbreak in wild mute swans.
title_short The ecology and age structure of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus outbreak in wild mute swans.
title_sort ecology and age structure of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus outbreak in wild mute swans
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