The genus Amdoparvovirus includes the newly discovered skunk amdoparvovirus and the well‐characterized Aleutian disease virus which causes significant health impacts in farmed mink worldwide. In 2010–2013, an outbreak of fatal amdoparvovirus‐associated disease was documented in free‐ranging striped skunks (Mephitis mephitis) from the San Francisco Bay Area of California. To characterize the geographic distribution, earliest occurrence and abundance of this virus, as well as possible impacts on sympatric mustelids of conservation concern, we tested blood samples from skunks throughout California and fishers (Pekania pennanti) from northern California for amdoparvovirus DNA. Amdoparvovirus DNA was detected in 64.8% of sampled skunks (140/216), and test‐positive skunks were distributed widely throughout the state, from as far north as Humboldt County and south to San Diego County. The first test‐positive skunks were detected from 2004, prior to the 2010–2013 outbreak. No significant spatial or temporal clustering of infection was detected. Although healthy and clinically ill animals tested positive for amdoparvovirus DNA, histopathologic evaluation of a subset from clinically ill skunks indicated that positive PCR results were associated with pneumonia as well as there being more than one inflammatory type lesion. None of 38 fishers were PCR‐positive. Given the widespread geographic distribution and lack of a clear epizootic centre, our results suggest the presence of an endemic skunk‐associated amdoparvovirus strain or species. However, if the virus is not host‐specific, skunks’ ubiquitous presence across rural and urban habitats may pose a risk to susceptible domestic and wild species including mustelids of conservation concern such as fishers and Pacific martens (Martes caurina).
Leptospirosis is a globally important, fatal disease of humans, and over 160 species of animals are associated with more than 250 bacterial serovars in 64 species, but its ecology varies regionally and has changed over time with expansion of human development on previously agricultural and wild land. Sporadic human cases and clusters of canine leptospirosis, primarily attributable to Leptospira interrogans serogroup Pomona, have been detected in northern California. Small mesocarnivores such as raccoons and skunks frequent peridomestic space across much of the western United States and could serve as reservoirs for human and canine leptospirosis. We aimed to summarize the prevalence of infection with pathogenic leptospires in skunk and raccoon renal and urinary samples across broad geographic zones in California, and to determine whether prevalence changed during wet and dry seasons, and as functions of host species and demographic characters. Overall, 25.6% (22/86 tested) of raccoons and 28.5% (39/137 tested) of skunks were PCR-positive for Leptospira spp. in either renal tissue or urine, with leptospiral DNA in 22.0% of kidney samples and 18.8% of urine samples from raccoons and 27.8% and 14.5% of kidney and urine samples from skunks, respectively. Raccoons from the Central California and skunks from the San Francisco Bay Area had the highest overall PCR-prevalence (35.7% and 44.4%), respectively, and adults were more likely to be PCR-positive for Leptospira spp. than juveniles. There was moderate agreement between urine and renal tissue Leptospira spp. PCR with sensitivity for both host species in renal tissue of 0.86-0.97 and 0.42-0.64 in urine. Cases of human leptospirosis are thought to be underrecognized in the continental United States and possibly increasing in some states, including California. Our data document regionally high rates of infection in common mesocarnivores, which can pose a threat to humans and dogs, revealing an important periurban epidemiological cycle.
We investigated the prevalence of Toxoplasma gondii in 2011-15 to assess its potential threat on the endangered Amargosa vole ( Microtus californicus scirpensis) in California, US. Surveillance was simultaneously performed on populations of syntopic rodent species. We detected antibodies to T. gondii in sera from 10.5% of 135 wild-caught Amargosa voles; 8% of 95 blood samples were PCR-positive for the T. gondii B1 gene, and 5.0% of 140 sympatric rodent brain samples were PCR-positive. Exposure to T. gondii did not change the probability that an animal would be recaptured in the field study. Behavioral response to domestic cat ( Felis catus ) and bobcat ( Lynx rufus ) urine was evaluated in five nonendangered Owens Valley voles ( Microtus californicus vallicola) as surrogates for Amargosa voles and seven uninfected controls. Voles showed mild attraction to mouse urine and had neutral reactions to domestic cat urine whether or not infected. Time spent near bobcat urine was approximately twice as high in infected than in uninfected voles (although not statistically significant). The presence of T. gondii in wild Amargosa vole and sympatric rodent populations may hinder the endangered Amargosa vole population's ability to recover in the wild.
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