| Literature DB >> 28970515 |
Tom Hellebuyck1, Karl Questel2, Frank Pasmans3, Leen Van Brantegem3, Pascal Philip2, An Martel3.
Abstract
Infectious diseases affecting wildlife are drivers of global biodiversity loss. Here we report a bacterial threat to endangered wild reptiles. Since April 2011, a severe skin disease has affected free-ranging, endangered Lesser Antillean iguanas (Iguana delicatissima) on the French Caribbean island of Saint Barthélemy and we identified Devriesea agamarum as the causative agent. The presence of this bacterium was also demonstrated in healthy lizards (anoles) co-inhabiting the island. All isolates from the iguanas corresponded to a single AFLP genotype that until now has exclusively been associated with infections in lizard species in captivity. The clonal relatedness of the isolates and recent emergence of the disease suggest recent arrival of a virulent D. agamarum clone on the island. The presence of healthy but infected lizards suggests the presence of asymptomatic reservoir hosts. This is the first description of a bacterial disease that poses a conservation threat towards free-ranging squamates.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28970515 PMCID: PMC5624884 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-11874-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Devriesea agamarum associated dermatitis and cutaneous granulomas in the axillar region of a free-ranging Lesser Antillean iguana (Iguana delicatissima).
AFLP types of Devriesea agamarum isolates obtained from free-ranging Lesser Antillean iguanas (Iguana delicatissima) and Anguilla anoles (Ctenonotus gingivinus) and captive lizard species (isolate 13–23).
| Isolate | Origin | Species | AFLP type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | abscess |
| C |
| 2 | abscess |
| C |
| 3 | abscess |
| C |
| 4 | abscess |
| C |
| 6 | abscess |
| C |
| 7 | abscess |
| C |
| 8 | oral cavity |
| C |
| 9 | cloaca |
| C |
| 10 | cloaca |
| C |
| 11 | cloaca |
| B |
| 12 | cloaca |
| B |
| 13 | oral cavity |
| A |
| 14 | oral cavity |
| A |
| 15 | oral cavity |
| A |
| 16 | dermatitis/liver |
| B |
| 17 | dermatitis |
| C |
| 21 | dermatitis |
| F |
| 22 | dermatitis |
| G |
| 23 | dermatitis |
| H |
The isolates from captive lizards were collected between 2003 and 2009 to study the relatedness of D. agamarum isolates using AFLP as described by Devloo et al.[13].
*D. agamarum type strain IMP2 (LMG 24257).
Figure 2Dendrogram constructed based on the obtained AFLP profiles of Devriesea agamarum isolates. Cluster analysis was performed with UPGMA using DICE algorithm and a tolerance and optimization level of 1.06%. The strains were classified in the same AFLP type if the relatedness was higher than 70%.