Abstract

BackgroundAvian influenza virus (AIV) is an important public health issue because pandemic influenza viruses in people have contained genes from viruses that infect birds. The H5 and H7 AIV subtypes have periodically mutated from low pathogenicity to high pathogenicity form. Analysis of the geographic distribution of AIV can identify areas where reassortment events might occur and how high pathogenicity influenza might travel if it enters wild bird populations in the US. Modelling the number of AIV cases is important because the rate of co-infection with multiple AIV subtypes increases with the number of cases and co-infection is the source of reassortment events that give rise to new strains of influenza, which occurred before the 1968 pandemic. Aquatic birds in the orders Anseriformes and Charadriiformes have been recognized as reservoirs of AIV since the 1970s. However, little is known about influenza prevalence in terrestrial birds in the order Passeriformes. Since passerines share the same habitat as poultry, they may be more effective transmitters of the disease to humans than aquatic birds. We analyze 152 passerine species including the American Robin (Turdus migratorius) and Swainson's Thrush (Catharus ustulatus).MethodsWe formulate a regression model to predict AIV cases throughout the US at the county scale as a function of 12 environmental variables, sampling effort, and proximity to other counties with influenza outbreaks. Our analysis did not distinguish between types of influenza, including low or highly pathogenic forms.ResultsAnalysis of 13,046 cloacal samples collected from 225 bird species in 41 US states between 2005 and 2008 indicates that the average prevalence of influenza in passerines is greater than the prevalence in eight other avian orders. Our regression model identifies the Great Plains and the Pacific Northwest as high-risk areas for AIV. Highly significant predictors of AIV include the amount of harvested cropland and the first day of the year when a county is snow free.ConclusionsAlthough the prevalence of influenza in waterfowl has long been appreciated, we show that 22 species of song birds and perching birds (order Passeriformes) are influenza reservoirs in the contiguous US.

Highlights

  • Avian influenza virus (AIV) is an important public health issue because pandemic influenza viruses in people have contained genes from viruses that infect birds

  • Outbreaks of H5N1 influenza in Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East further illustrate the human health implications of influenza in birds. (Influenza viruses are classified into "HA" and "NA" subtypes based on surface proteins.) People contract H5N1 by handling infected poultry or wild birds after which the virus binds to receptors in the pulmonary alveoli, causing pneumonia and death due to respiratory failure [9,10,11]

  • Influenza prevalence in Passeriformes We evaluated the hypothesis that AIV was prevalent among 11 avian orders by testing the null hypothesis

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Summary

Introduction

Avian influenza virus (AIV) is an important public health issue because pandemic influenza viruses in people have contained genes from viruses that infect birds. There is a strong link between influenza in birds and human health because influenza epidemics in human populations occur when viruses that typically inhabit the avian gastrointestinal tract mutate or reassort, enabling them to cross the species barrier to infect people [1]. (Influenza viruses are classified into "HA" and "NA" subtypes based on surface proteins.) People contract H5N1 by handling infected poultry or wild birds after which the virus binds to receptors in the pulmonary alveoli, causing pneumonia and death due to respiratory failure [9,10,11]. The ongoing human pandemic of H1N1 influenza, which has caused over 296,000 human cases and at least 15,921 deaths since mid-February 2009, contains genes from avian, human, and swine influenza viruses [12]

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