| Literature DB >> 35665871 |
Thibaut Roost1, Jo-Ann Schies1, Marc Girondot2, Jean-Patrice Robin3, Pierre Lelong1, Jordan Martin1, Flora Siegwalt3, Lorène Jeantet3, Mathieu Giraudeau4, Guillaume Le Loch5, Manola Bejarano1, Marc Bonola1, Abdelwahab Benhalilou6, Céline Murgale6, Lucas Andreani6, François Jacaria6, Guilhem Campistron6, Anthony Lathière6, François Martial6, Gaëlle Hielard7, Alexandre Arqué7, Sidney Régis1, Nicolas Lecerf1, Cédric Frouin1, Fabien Lefebvre8, Nathalie Aubert8, Frédéric Flora1, Esteban Pimentel, Rachelle Lafolle1, Florence Thobor1, Mosiah Arthus1, Denis Etienne9, Nathaël Lecerf1, Jean-Pierre Allenou10, Florian Desigaux1, Eugène Larcher11, Christian Larcher11, Alberto Lo Curto12, Joanne Befort12, Myriane Maceno-Panevel13, Muriel Lepori6, Pascale Chevallier6, Tao Chevallier6, Stéphane Meslier14, Anthony Landreau14, Caroline Habold3, Yvon Le Maho3,15, Damien Chevallier16.
Abstract
Fibropapillomatosis (FP) threatens the survival of green turtle (Chelonia mydas) populations at a global scale, and human activities are regularly pointed as causes of high FP prevalence. However, the association of ecological factors with the disease's severity in complex coastal systems has not been well established and requires further studies. Based on a set of 405 individuals caught over ten years, this preliminary study provides the first insight of FP in Martinique Island, which is a critical development area for immature green turtles. Our main results are: (i) 12.8% of the individuals were affected by FP, (ii) FP has different prevalence and temporal evolution between very close sites, (iii) green turtles are more frequently affected on the upper body part such as eyes (41.4%), fore flippers (21.9%), and the neck (9.4%), and (iv) high densities of individuals are observed on restricted areas. We hypothesise that turtle's aggregation enhances horizontal transmission of the disease. FP could represent a risk for immature green turtles' survival in the French West Indies, a critical development area, which replenishes the entire Atlantic population. Continuing scientific monitoring is required to identify which factors are implicated in this panzootic disease and ensure the conservation of the green turtle at an international scale.Entities:
Keywords: environmental quality; epizootiology; infectious disease; marine turtles
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35665871 DOI: 10.1007/s10393-022-01601-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecohealth ISSN: 1612-9202 Impact factor: 4.464