| Literature DB >> 15207067 |
Adam M Ringia1, Bradley J Blitvich, Hyun-Young Koo, Marshall Van de Wyngaerde, Jeff D Brawn, Robert J Novak.
Abstract
Antibodies to West Nile virus were detected in 94 of 1,784 Illinois birds during 2002. Captive and urban birds had higher seropositivity than did birds from natural areas, and northern and central Illinois birds' seropositivity was greater than that from birds from the southern sites. Adult and hatch-year exposure rates did not differ significantly.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15207067 PMCID: PMC3323157 DOI: 10.3201/eid1006.030644
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Locations of the study sites in the avian serologic survey for West Nile virus infection, Illinois, 2002.
Birds, listed alphabetically by order, tested for WNV antibody in Illinois in 2002, including number of birds positive and number testeda
| Order | Common name | No. tested | No. WNV-positive (%) | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anseriformes | Canada Goose | 253 | 3 (1.2) | 0.3 to 3.4 |
| Wood Duck | 120 | 3 (2.5) | 0.5 to 7.1 | |
| 3 additional species | 35 | 0 | ||
| Columbiformes | Mourning Dove | 11 | 1 (9.1) | 0.2 to 41.3 |
| Rock Doveb | 20 | 11 (55.0) | 31.5 to 76.9 | |
| Galliformes | Chukarb | 22 | 6 (27.3) | 10.7 to 50.2 |
| Domestic Chickenb | 63 | 5 (7.9) | 2.6 to 17.6 | |
| 2 additional species | 16 | 0 | ||
| Passeriformes | Cedar Waxwing | 5 | 1 (20.0) | 0.5 to 71.6 |
| Blue Grosbeak | 2 | 1 (50.0) | 1.2 to 98.7 | |
| Indigo Bunting | 28 | 1 (3.6) | 0.1 to 18.4 | |
| Northern Cardinal | 129 | 16 (12.4) | 7.3 to 9.4 | |
| American Crow | 157 | 5 (3.2) | 1.0 to 7.3 | |
| Red-winged Blackbird | 39 | 3 (7.7) | 1.6 to 20.9 | |
| Brown Thrasher | 19 | 2 (10.5) | 1.3 to 33.1 | |
| Gray Catbird | 72 | 6 (8.3) | 3.1 to 17.3 | |
| Ovenbird | 32 | 1 (3.1) | 0.1 to 16.2 | |
| House Sparrow | 185 | 21 (11.4) | 7.1 to 16.8 | |
| American Robin | 79 | 3 (3.8) | 0.8 to 10.7 | |
| Swainson’s Thrush | 32 | 1 (3.1) | 0.1 to16.2 | |
| 45 additional species | 422 | 0 (0) | ||
| Strigiformes | Great Horned Owlb | 9 | 4 (44.4) | 13.7 to 78.8 |
| 2 additional species | 3 | 0 | ||
| Other (5 orders) | 10 species | 31 | 0 | |
| Total (10 orders) | 81 species | 1784 | 94 (5.3) | 4.2 to 6.4 |
aWNV, West Nile virus; CI, confidence interval. bIndicates captive specimens.
Logistic regression analysis of Illinois avian WNV antibody prevalence, 2002a
| Factor | DF | Wald χ2 | p value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Region | 2 | 17.65 | <0.0001 |
| Month | 10 | 44.80 | <0.0001 |
| Habitat (urban/natural) | 1 | 1.29 | 0.26 |
| Full model | 13 | 78.21 | <0.0001 |
| r2 = 0.14 |
aWNV, West Nile virus; DF, degrees of freedom. bDependent variable, presence or absence of WNV antibody.
Figure 2Monthly percentage of West Nile virus antibody–positive birds in Illinois during 2002, with corresponding sample size. First human, mosquito, and equine cases for Illinois are reported for comparison. Bars show the monthly sample size and lines indicate the monthly seroprevalence.
Differences in West Nile virus seropositivity in birds by age, region, and habitat using chi-square analysis, Illinois, 2002
| Comparison | Samples, n (% total); N = 1,784 | Antibody + (%)a | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Habitat | Urban | 524 (29.4%) | 34 (6.49%)A |
| Natural | 1,121 (62.8) | 34 (3.03%)B | |
| Captive | 139 (8.2%) | 26 (18.71%)C | |
| χ2 = 63.06 | p < 0.0001 | ||
| Region | Northern | 412 (23.1%) | 20 (4.85%)D |
| Central | 796 (44.6%) | 62 (7.79%)D | |
| Southern | 576 (32.3%) | 12 (2.08%)E | |
| χ2 = 21.98 | p < 0.0001 | ||
| Ageb | Adult | 455 (25.5%) | 10 (2.2%)F |
| Hatch-year | 508 (28.5%) | 21 (4.1%)F | |
| χ2 = 2.81 | p < 0.096 |
aLike (capital letter) superscripts indicate no difference in pairwise comparisons. b821 of the 1,784 birds had no age recorded at time of collection. The remaining 963 were used for the age analysis.