4.3 Article

To get sick or not to get sick-Trichomonas infections in two Accipiter species from Germany

Journal

PARASITOLOGY RESEARCH
Volume 120, Issue 10, Pages 3555-3567

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00436-021-07299-1

Keywords

Trichomonas gallinae; Parasitic infection; Birds of prey; Host-parasite coevolution; Naive host; Trichomonosis

Categories

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL
  2. Senate Competition Committee grant of the Leibniz Association [SAW-2014-SGN-3]
  3. German Research Foundation (DFG) [GRK2046]
  4. Stiftung Naturschutz Berlin [J0056, J0088]
  5. Ministerium fur landliche Entwicklung, Umwelt und Landwirtschaft des Landes Brandenburg [35-21340/7 + 5-51/16]
  6. `Behorde fur Wirtschaft, Verkehr und Innovation der freien Hansestadt Hamburg' (title: `Gesundheitsstatus und Ausbreitungsverhalten von Habichtnestlingen in Hamburg')
  7. Ministerium fur Energiewende, Landwirtschaft, Umwelt und landliche Raume des Landes Schleswig-Holstein [V 542 -42902/2016]

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The study showed that there is a higher strain diversity and prevalence of Trichomonas spp. in Northern goshawks compared to Eurasian sparrowhawks, but infected sparowhawks displayed more clinical signs of trichomonosis.
Trichomonosis caused by the flagellate Trichomonas gallinae is one of the most important avian diseases worldwide. The parasite is localised in the oesophageal area of its host and mainly infects pigeon and dove species. During the last decade, a host expansion to passerine birds occurred, making the disease a potential threat for passerine predators as naive host species. Here, we investigated the effect of the parasite on two Accipiter species in Germany which show a comparable lifestyle but differ in prey choice, the Northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis) mainly hunting pigeons and the Eurasian sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus) mainly feeding on passerines. We genetically identified the parasite strains using the Fe-Hydrogenase gene as marker locus and compared the incidence of parasite presence and clinical signs of trichomonosis between nestlings of the two Accipiter species. In total, we identified 14 strains, with nine strains unknown so far. There was a higher strain diversity and prevalence of Trichomonas spp. in goshawks than sparrowhawks (42.4% vs. 21.2%) whereas sparrowhawks when being infected more often displayed clinical signs of trichomonosis than goshawks (37.1% vs. 6.1%). Even though sparrowhawks were mainly infected with the finch epidemic strain and genetic data indicated some variation between isolates, no correlation with virulence could be detected. All in all, goshawks seem to be better adapted to Trichomonas infections, whereas to sparrowhawks, this is a novel disease with more severe manifestations, from individual morbidity to a higher risk of population decline caused by trichomonosis.

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