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High pathogenicity avian influenza (H5N1) in Northern Gannets: Global spread, clinical signs, and demographic consequences

Authors :
Jude V Lane
Jana WE Jeglinski
Stephanie Avery-Gomm
Elmar Ballstaedt
Ashley C Banyard
Tatsiana Barychka
Ian H Brown
Brigitte Brugger
Tori V Burt
Noah Careen
Johan HF Castenschiold
Signe Christensen-Dalsgaard
Shannon Clifford
Sydney M Collins
Emma Cunningham
Jóhannis Danielsen
Francis Daunt
Kyle JN d’Entremont
Parker Doiron
Steven Duffy
Matthew D English
Marco Falchieri
Jolene Giacinti
Britt Gjerset
Silje Granstad
David Grémillet
Magella Guillemette
Gunnar T Hallgrímsson
Keith C Hamer
Sjúrður Hammer
Katherine Harrison
Justin D Hart
Ciaran Hatsell
Richard Humpidge
Joe James
Audrey Jenkinson
Mark Jessopp
Megan EB Jones
Stéphane Lair
Thomas Lewis
Alexandra A Malinowska
Aly McCluskie
Gretchen McPhail
Børge Moe
William A Montevecchi
Greg Morgan
Caroline Nichol
Craig Nisbet
Bergur Olsen
Jennifer Provencher
Pascal Provost
Alex Purdie
Jean-François Rail
Greg Robertson
Yannick Seyer
Maggie Sheddan
Catherine Soos
Nia Stephens
Hallvard Strøm
Vilhjálmur Svansson
T David Tierney
Glen Tyler
Tom Wade
Sarah Wanless
Christopher RE Ward
Sabina Wilhelm
Saskia Wischnewski
Lucy J Wright
Bernie Zonfrillo
Jason Matthiopoulos
Stephen C Votier
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

During 2021-22 High Pathogenicity Avian Influenza (HPAI) killed thousands of wild birds across Europe and North America, suggesting a change in infection dynamics and a shift to new hosts, including seabirds. Northern Gannets (Morus bassanus) appeared especially severely impacted, but limited understanding of how the virus spread across the metapopulation, or the demographic consequences of mass mortality limit our understanding of its severity. Accordingly, we collate information on HPAIV outbreaks across most North Atlantic gannet colonies and for the largest colony (Bass Rock, UK), provide impacts on population size, breeding success, adult survival, and preliminary results on serology. Unusually high numbers of dead gannets were first noted in Iceland during April 2022. Outbreaks in May occurred in many Scottish colonies, followed by colonies in Canada, Germany and Norway. By the end of June, outbreaks had occurred in five Canadian colonies and in the Channel Islands. Outbreaks in 12 UK and Ireland colonies appeared to follow a clockwise pattern with the last infected colonies recorded in late August/September. Unusually high mortality was recorded at 40 colonies (75% of global total colonies). Dead birds testing positive for HPAIV H5N1 were associated with 58% of these colonies. At Bass Rock, the number of occupied sites decreased by at least 71%, breeding success declined by ∼66% compared to the long-term UK mean and adult survival between 2021 and 2022 was 42% lower than the preceding 10-year average. Serological investigation detected antibodies specific to H5 in apparently healthy birds indicating that some gannets recover from HPAIV infection. Further, most of these recovered birds had black irises, suggestive of a phenotypic indicator of previous infection. Untangling the impacts of HPAIV infection from other key pressures faced by seabirds is key to establishing effective conservation strategies for threatened seabird populations, HPAIV being a novel and pandemic threat.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........de2187a4fabae6ade87f9bc90694d745