| Literature DB >> 30305642 |
Becki Lawson1, Robert A Robinson2, Julia Rodriguez-Ramos Fernandez3, Shinto K John4, Laura Benitez5, Conny Tolf6, Kate Risely2, Mike P Toms2, Andrew A Cunningham4, Richard A J Williams6,7.
Abstract
Proliferative leg skin lesions have been described in wild finches in Europe although there have been no large-scale studies of their aetiology or epizootiology to date. Firstly, disease surveillance, utilising public reporting of observations of live wild finches was conducted in Great Britain (GB) and showed proliferative leg skin lesions in chaffinches (Fringilla coelebs) to be widespread. Seasonal variation was observed, with a peak during the winter months. Secondly, pathological investigations were performed on a sample of 39 chaffinches, four bullfinches (Pyrrhula pyrrhula), one greenfinch (Chloris chloris) and one goldfinch (Carduelis carduelis) with proliferative leg skin lesions and detected Cnemidocoptes sp. mites in 91% (41/45) of affected finches and from all species examined. Fringilla coelebs papillomavirus (FcPV1) PCR was positive in 74% (23/31) of birds tested: a 394 base pair sequence was derived from 20 of these birds, from all examined species, with 100% identity to reference genomes. Both mites and FcPV1 DNA were detected in 71% (20/28) of birds tested for both pathogens. Histopathological examination of lesions did not discriminate the relative importance of mite or FcPV1 infection as their cause. Development of techniques to localise FcPV1 within lesions is required to elucidate the pathological significance of FcPV1 DNA detection.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30305642 PMCID: PMC6180014 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-32255-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Regional occurrence of chaffinch leg lesion reports in 2014–2015 reported by opportunistic surveillance. Shading indicates the number of gardens reporting diseased individuals through the Garden Wildlife Health website (www.gardenwildlifehealth.org) per 100,000 gardens in the region. Map was created using ArcMap 10.0 (https://desktop.arcgis.com/en/arcmap/).
Figure 2Seasonal occurrence of chaffinch leg lesion reports in 2014–2015. Bars indicate the total number of opportunistic reports to the Garden Wildlife Health website (www.gardenwildlifehealth.org) by month for the first month a report was received at each site per annum (filled bars) and for the total number of reports received for each month across sites (open bars).
Figure 3Seasonal occurrence of chaffinches in 2014–2015. The solid line indicates the mean proportion of gardens in the systematic survey reporting chaffinches each week and the dashed line the 95% confidence intervals about this line. The box and whisker plots summarise the mean percentage of gardens reporting chaffinches across the regions over both years.
Summary statistics for models of seasonal variation in reporting of leg lesions in chaffinches from the systematic data.
| Model | Estimated d.f. | ΔAIC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| week | 1 | 0 | |
| s(week) | 6.26 (F = 23.3, p < 0.001) | −134.4 | |
| side + s(week) | 6.22 (F = 22.7, p < 0.001) | −142.9 | |
| East | West | ||
| side + s(week): side | 6.26 (F = 20.0, p < 0.001) | 5.05 (F = 6.1, p < 0.001) | −148.3 |
Season is indicated by calendar week and models include either a linear (first model β = 0.0003 ± 0.0008, t = 0.4, p = 0.69) or a spline smooth, s(week), of season together with a fixed effect indicating side of country (East/West) either as an intercept (‘+’) or interaction (‘:’). The table gives the estimated degrees of freedom of the smooth (together with a test of whether this is different from 0) and the model AIC (expressed as the difference from the linear null model).
Figure 4Occurrence of chaffinch leg lesions in eastern (blue) and western (red) Great Britain through the year. Solid lines indicate the relative mean occurrence (compared to the annual mean) through the year and shading indicates the 95% confidence region about the lines. Points indicate the mean and vertical bars the inter-quartile, reported occurrence in each region in each week.
Figure 5Proportion of gardens with birds with leg lesions in relation to the mean number of chaffinches reported. Each point represents a weekly mean for each region and points are coloured by region. Solid lines indicate the slopes for each region estimated from a GLMM with a random slope term; lines extend though the data included in the model (i.e. three anomalous points were excluded, see text).
Breakdown of finch species with leg lesions detected on post-mortem examination, April 2005–December 2015.
| Species | Total no. of birds examined | Total no. of birds with leg lesions (%); from No. of sites | Sex of birds with leg lesions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chaffinch | 250 | 39 (16%); 37 | 26 male; 11 female; 2 undetermined |
| Bullfinch | 45 | 4 (9%); 4 | 2 male; 1 female; 1 undetermined |
| Goldfinch | 91 | 1 (1%); 1 | 1 female |
| Greenfinch | 617 | 1 (0.2%); 1 | 1 undetermined |
| Siskin | 47 | 0 | N/A |
| Lesser redpoll | 4 | 0 | N/A |
| Brambling | 8 | 0 | N/A |
| Hawfinch | 2 | 0 | N/A |
| Common crossbill | 1 | 0 | N/A |
| Linnet | 1 | 0 | N/A |
| TOTAL | 1066 | 45 (4%); 42 |
N/A = Not applicable.
Diagnostic test results for Cnemidocoptes sp. mite detection, avian papillomavirus and avian poxvirus PCR by finch species.
| Species | Papillomavirus PCR% positive (no. positive/total no. tested) | Avian poxvirus PCR% positive (no. positive/total no. tested) | TOTAL no. of birds with leg lesions by species | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bullfinch | 100% (4/4) | 67% (2/3) | 0% (0/3) | 4 |
| Chaffinch | 90% (35/39) | 73% (19/26) | 0% (0/26) | 39 |
| Greenfinch | 100% (1/1) | 100% (1/1) | 0% (0/1) | 1 |
| Goldfinch | 100% (1/1) | 100% (1/1) | 0% (0/1) | 1 |
| TOTAL | 91% (41/45) | 74% (23/31) | 0% (0/31) | 45 |
Asterisk denotes the results of NaOH digest and histopathology combined.
Figure 6Appearance of normal chaffinch leg skin (a) and examples of proliferative leg skin lesions in the same host species according to three categories used in this study (b) papilliferous tassel-like lesions (e.g. XT0981-05) category 1 (c) generalised scale and/or cornified proliferative lesions with smooth surface (e.g. XT1094-13) category 2 (d) mixed appearance (e.g. XT507-13) category 3.