Abstract

West Nile Virus (WNV) infection has been reported in over 300 species of birds and mammals. Raptors such as eagles, hawks and falcons are remarkably susceptible, but reports of WNV infection in Bald Eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) are rare and reports of WNV infection in grebes (Podicipediformes) even rarer. We report an unusually large wild bird mortality event involving between 15,000-20,000 Eared Grebes (Podiceps nigricollis) and over 40 Bald Eagles around the Great Salt Lake, Utah, in November-December 2013. Mortality in grebes was first reported in early November during a period when the area was unseasonably warm and the grebes were beginning to gather and stage prior to migration. Ten out of ten Eared Grebes collected during this period were WNV RT-PCR and/or isolation positive. This is the first report of WNV infection in Eared Grebes and the associated mortality event is matched in scale only by the combined outbreaks in American White Pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) colonies in the north central states in 2002-2003. We cannot be sure that all of the grebes were infected by mosquito transmission; some may have become infected through contact with WNV shed orally or cloacally from other infected grebes. Beginning in early December, Bald Eagles in the Great Salt Lake area were observed to display neurological signs such as body tremors, limb paralysis and lethargy. At least 43 Bald Eagles had died by the end of the month. Nine of nine Bald Eagles examined were infected with WNV. To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest single raptor mortality event since WNV became endemic in the USA. Because the majority of the eagles affected were found after onset of below-freezing temperatures, we suggest at least some of the Bald Eagles were infected with WNV via consumption of infected Eared Grebes or horizontal transmission at roost sites.

Highlights

  • West Nile Virus (WNV) was originally isolated from the blood of a febrile human patient in the West Nile district in Uganda

  • The die-off may be the largest documented wild bird mortality event due to WNV in the US and is the largest WNVassociated raptor mortality event since WNV became endemic in the US. (We defined an event as an outbreak of a specific duration and circumscribed in area.) Here we describe the epidemiology of the this outbreak as of 2013 and the results of investigations to date, and we discuss factors that may have contributed to the occurrence of the outbreak

  • At the Great Salt Lake, we have detected WNV in two groups of Eared Grebes collected a month apart and from two different locations, suggesting that exposure to WNV might have been widespread in this species at this location in 2013

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Summary

Introduction

West Nile Virus (WNV) was originally isolated from the blood of a febrile human patient in the West Nile district in Uganda. Sporadic introductions of Lineage I and II WNV continue to occur in the Mediterranean basin. WNV infection has been reported in only two species in the order Podicipediformes (grebes) 3,4. At least 36 species of raptors (orders Falconiformes and Strigiformes) are susceptible to infection with WNV 5. Species such as Red-tailed Hawks (Buteo jamaicensis) and Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus) develop systemic infections within five days post exposure, shed virus orally and cloacally and develop viremia capable of infecting mosquitoes (>105 pfu/ml serum). Red-tailed Hawk is one of the species of raptor most often infected with WNV in Virginia and in 2003 alone, at least 90 died from WNV 8,9

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