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The protozoan parasite Trichomonas gallinae causes adult and nestling mortality in a declining population of European turtle doves, Streptopelia turtur

Version 2 2024-03-12, 14:56
Version 1 2024-03-01, 09:57
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 14:56 authored by Jennifer E. Stockdale, Jenny Dunn, Simon J. Goodman, Antony J. Sheehan, Danae K. Sheehan, Philip V. Grice, Keith C. Hamer

Studies incorporating the ecology of clinical and sub-clinical disease in wild populations of conservation concern are rare. Here we examine sub-clinical infection by Trichomonas gallinae in a declining population of free-living European Turtle Doves and suggest caseous lesions cause mortality in adults and nestlings through subsequent starvation and/or suffocation. We found a 100% infection rate by T. gallinae in adult and nestling Turtle Doves (n = 25) and observed clinical signs in three adults and four nestlings (28%). Adults with clinical signs displayed no differences in any skeletal measures of size but had a mean 3·7% reduction in wing length, with no overlap compared to those without clinical signs.We also identified T. gallinae as the suggested cause of mortality in one Red-legged Partridge although disease presentation was different. A minimum of four strains of T. gallinae, characterized at the ITS/5·8S/ITS2 ribosomal region, were isolated from Turtle Doves. However, all birds with clinical signs (Turtle Doves and the Red-legged Partridge) carried a single strain of T. gallinae, suggesting that parasite spill over between Columbidae and Galliformes is a possibility that should be further investigated. Overall, we highlight the importance of monitoring populations for sub-clinical infection rather than just clinical disease

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Parasitology

Volume

142

Issue

03

Pages/Article Number

490-498

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP): STM

ISSN

0031-1820

eISSN

1469-8161

Date Submitted

2016-12-20

Date Accepted

2014-08-18

Date of First Publication

2014-09-12

Date of Final Publication

2015-03-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2016-12-06

ePrints ID

25336

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