2017
DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2017.00178
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Avian Influenza Virus Surveillance in South-Central Spain Using Fecal Samples of Aquatic Birds Foraging at Landfills

Abstract: Aquatic wild birds have been intensively studied to better understand their role in avian influenza virus (AIV) maintenance and spread. To date, AIV surveillance has primarily focused on natural aquatic environments where different bird species aggregate and viral survival is enhanced. However, artificial habitats such as landfills are attracting substantial numbers of wild birds, AIV reservoir species included. The use of landfills as a predictable food source has significantly influenced population size, mig… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 44 publications
(66 reference statements)
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“…While these studies suggest at least a low-level prevalence of IAVs in cattle egrets in the wild, we only found one experimental study that evaluated infection dynamics. In that study [ 31 ], six cattle egrets were experimentally inoculated with an HP H5N1 virus. While all individuals were highly susceptible and either died or were euthanized, only a low level of viral RNA shedding was observed, and none of the five contact chickens became infected.…”
Section: Cattle Egrets Herons Bitterns: Order Pelecaniformes Famentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While these studies suggest at least a low-level prevalence of IAVs in cattle egrets in the wild, we only found one experimental study that evaluated infection dynamics. In that study [ 31 ], six cattle egrets were experimentally inoculated with an HP H5N1 virus. While all individuals were highly susceptible and either died or were euthanized, only a low level of viral RNA shedding was observed, and none of the five contact chickens became infected.…”
Section: Cattle Egrets Herons Bitterns: Order Pelecaniformes Famentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ES was found to be comparable to that of LBS in several contexts (Grillo et al, 2015;Pannwitz et al, 2009;Vergne et al, 2019), while less sensitive in others Mellor et al, 2018;Sonnberg et al, 2012;Tracey, 2010). Furthermore, the use of environmental faecal sampling in the surveillance of LPAIV is well supported by the literature (Baek et al, 2010;Barbara et al, 2017;Gaidet et al, 2007;Lebarbenchon et al, 2010;Perez-Ramirez et al, 2010). In particular, when fresh faecal samples were collected immediately, they were found to have similar (Perez-Ramirez et al, 2010) or higher detection rates than oropharyngeal swabs (Busquets et al, 2010) and cloacal swabs (Chen et al, 2014;Latorre-Margalef, Avril, Tolf, Olsen, & Waldenstrom, 2016).…”
Section: Advantages Of Environmental Samplingmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Several other examples highlight the effectiveness of ES used either on its own (for low pathogenic AIV (LPAIV)) in wild bird surveillance (Baek et al., 2010; Barbara et al., 2017; Perez‐Ramirez, Gerrikagoitia, Barral, & Hofle, 2010; Piaggio et al., 2012), or as a component (for HPAIV) (Bevins et al., 2014; Haynes et al., 2009; Khan et al., 2018) of large‐scale risk‐based surveillance systems in both high‐ (Deliberto et al., 2009; Grillo et al., 2015; Piaggio et al., 2012; Preskenis, Ladman, & Gelb, 2017) and low‐resourced (Gaidet et al., 2007; Gerloff et al., 2014; Khan et al., 2018; Ofula et al., 2013; Tun Win et al., 2017) settings, where broad‐scale surveillance proves logistically challenging (Grillo et al., 2015).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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