2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0102964
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Ecological Routes of Avian Influenza Virus Transmission to a Common Mesopredator: An Experimental Evaluation of Alternatives

Abstract: BackgroundWild raccoons have been shown to be naturally exposed to avian influenza viruses (AIV). However, the mechanisms associated with these natural exposures are not well-understood.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe experimentally tested three alternative routes (water, eggs, and scavenged waterfowl carcasses) of AIV transmission that may explain how raccoons in the wild are exposed to AIV. Raccoons were exposed to 1) water and 2) eggs spiked with an AIV (H4N6), as well as 3) mallard carcasses experimentall… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…This is in contrast to raccoons (Procyon lotor), as free access to water pans spiked with 10 5 and 10 3.2 EID 50 / mL of IAV only resulted in transmission to a fraction of raccoons experimentally tested with the higher dose of water [16], thereby suggesting that raccoons require a higher inoculation dose for successful infection, presumably via the oral route, when compared to cottontail rabbits. Nonetheless, raccoons have been commonly shown to have antibody responses to IAV in multiple regions in their native range [7] as well as in introduced populations elsewhere [8], suggesting that a sufficient mechanism for their infection exists but may not be well described at this time.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
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“…This is in contrast to raccoons (Procyon lotor), as free access to water pans spiked with 10 5 and 10 3.2 EID 50 / mL of IAV only resulted in transmission to a fraction of raccoons experimentally tested with the higher dose of water [16], thereby suggesting that raccoons require a higher inoculation dose for successful infection, presumably via the oral route, when compared to cottontail rabbits. Nonetheless, raccoons have been commonly shown to have antibody responses to IAV in multiple regions in their native range [7] as well as in introduced populations elsewhere [8], suggesting that a sufficient mechanism for their infection exists but may not be well described at this time.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…The oral route of infection, although less efficient in this species, is likely to be a more probable natural infection route than nasal exposure. Nonetheless, inadvertent nasal exposures while utilizing a body of water have been suggested for other mammal species [16]. As has been suggested previously [18,19], cottontail rabbits should be taken into account in the biosecurity plans of poultry facilities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…We hypothesize that the lack of contact transmission among cohoused ducks is due to the lack of large shared water resources conducive of oral-fecal transmission. For example, others have shown successful transmission among mallards in contact with a water source previously contaminated by experimentally infected mallards [18] and water-associated transmission has also been postulated for mammals [12]. Overall, the index mallards in the highdensity stack appear to have shed virus for insufficient time and in insufficient quantities to elicit transmission within this stacked cage setting.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%