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Researchers
Investigate New Suspect In West Nile Deaths Of Pelicans
Thursday, September 27, 2007
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Top
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Adult
pelicans at the Medicine Lake National Wildlife Refuge fly up to
150 miles one way a day looking for food.
Credit:
Greg Johnson
Bottom
Image
Stable
flies like these are now being investigated for possibly
transmitting West Nile virus to pelicans at the Medicine Lake
National Wildlife Refuge.
Credit:
Whitney Cranshaw, Colorado State University
Stable flies are the latest
suspect that may be involved in the West Nile virus deaths of
hundreds of pelican chicks at the Medicine Lake National Wildlife
Refuge in northeast Montana. West Nile virus killed 800 to 1,000
pelican chicks in 2003, averaged 400 in each of the next three
summers and more than 600 this year.
Veterinary
entomologist Greg Johnson of Montana State University said
earlier this year that he considered the possibility that lice
were transmitting West Nile virus to pelicans. He became
suspicious after collecting very few mosquitoes in 2006, but
seeing pelicans continue to die at a high rate. Johnson
discovered previously that the Culex tarsalis mosquito is the
primary carrier of West Nile virus in Montana and that the
Medicine Lake refuge was one of the hot spots for the
virus.
Many of the dead pelicans at Medicine Lake had lice
crawling inside and outside of their beak, Johnson continued.
Mike Rabenberg, deputy refuge manager, said external parasites --
especially pouch lice and feather lice -- are common on the
Medicine Lake pelicans. The lice may be more prevalent, he said,
on pelicans that are sick or weakened.
The lice were
cleared, however, after Johnson sent pelican tissue samples and
lice to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Fort
Collins, Colo. The lab tested approximately 800 lice, but none
was found to have West Nile even though most came from pelicans
that tested positive.
Stable flies caught Johnson's
attention when he came across a bird with blood on its neck and
some flies feeding on the blood during the third week of July.
Stable flies look like common house flies, but they have a
painful bite. They come from a different family than horse flies
or deer flies, however.
"This (the stable fly scene)
was very unusual because stable flies are only reported to feed
on domestic livestock, humans and companion animals,"
Johnson said. "There are no reports in the literature of
stable flies feeding on domestic or wild birds."
Johnson
observed the stable flies feeding on birds several more times. He
also collected about 1,300 flies and divided them into 60 groups.
Eighteen of those groups tested positive for West Nile
virus.
"This is the first report of stable flies
feeding on wild birds, or pelicans for that matter, and the first
report of stable flies infected with West Nile virus,"
Johnson said. "These results suggest that stable flies might
be involved in amplification and/or transmission of West Nile
virus at the pelican colony and possibly could serve as a vector
of West Nile virus to other pelicans."
If the theory
proves correct, he will have to modify some of his study methods
because they currently focus on mosquitoes, Johnson said. He
added that the number of captured mosquitoes was high this
summer, as well as the West Nile infection rate in those
mosquitoes.
As far as the relationship among lice,
pelicans and West Nile virus goes, Johnson said the lice created
wounds that could be a point of entry for the virus, however they
don‛t pass along the virus.
"I don't think they
are playing a primary role in West Nile transmission because they
don't have to have blood for egg development, energy and
survival," Johnson said. "Rather, they feed on
epidermal or skin cells which creates wounds, causing blood to
exude and then they feed on the blood. The wounds they cause may
provide entry sites for West Nile virus, and the young pelicans
can get infected that way."
The Medicine Lake
National Wildlife Refuge between Plentywood and Culbertson
contains the fifth largest colony of American white pelicans in
North America. Rabenberg said the colony normally includes 8,000
to 10,000 breeding adults and approximately 4,000 nests. The
adult pelicans fly up to 150 miles one way a day looking for
food. The Medicine Lake adults fly to other mosquito-rich areas
like Terry, the Fort Peck Reservoir and the Yellowstone River.Re
They fly into Saskatchewan and North Dakota. The adult pelicans
typically winter along the Gulf coast, but some reach southern
Mexico.
Source:
Montana State University / Evelyn Boswell
Time
Stamp: 9/27/2007 at 10:47:41 AM CST

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