Distribution and prevalence of Sarcina troglodytae in chimpanzees and the environment throughout Africa.

IF 2
Emily Dunay, Ismail Hirji, Leah A Owens, Konkofa Marah, Naomi Anderson, Maria Ruiz, Rebeca Atencia, Joshua Rukundo, Alexandra G Rosati, Megan F Cole, Melissa Emery Thompson, Jacob D Negrey, Samuel Angedakin, Johanna R Elfenbein, Tony L Goldberg
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Abstract

Introduction. Since 2005, the leading cause of death for western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) at Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary (TCS) in Sierra Leone has been epizootic neurologic and gastroenteric syndrome (ENGS), associated with the bacterium Sarcina troglodytae (family Clostridiaceae).Gap Statement. The prevalence of S. troglodytae at TCS in clinically normal chimpanzees and the environment remains unknown, as does its distribution in other captive and wild chimpanzee populations and their environments across Africa.Aim. The aim of this study was to determine the distribution and prevalence of Sarcina bacteria in sanctuary and wild chimpanzee populations across Africa and to identify demographic and ecological risk factors for S. troglodytae in chimpanzees and the environment.Methodology. We conducted a prospective, multi-season epidemiological investigation of S. troglodytae in chimpanzees and the environment at TCS and a parallel study at a sanctuary in the Republic of Congo. We also describe the results of surveys of chimpanzees at a sanctuary in Uganda and wild chimpanzee populations in Sierra Leone and Uganda for S. troglodytae. In total, we tested 637 chimpanzee and environmental samples using a species-specific PCR for S. troglodytae and a pan-Sarcina PCR.Results. S. troglodytae was more prevalent in chimpanzees at TCS (n=60) during the dry season (96.7%) than during the rainy season (55.2%). Soil was the most common environmental source of the bacterium (54% dry season vs. 4.8% rainy season). Notably, we did not detect S. troglodytae in faecal samples from sanctuary chimpanzees in the Republic of Congo (n=79) or in wild chimpanzees in Sierra Leone (n=18). We did detect the bacterium in East African chimpanzees (n=84) but at low prevalence (2.6%-10.9%). In contrast, we found the genus Sarcina to be ubiquitous in all chimpanzee populations with a higher prevalence in sanctuary chimpanzees (93.1%-100%) than in wild chimpanzees (66.7%-68.4%).Conclusion. S. troglodytae is markedly more prevalent at TCS, the only location affected by ENGS, than at any other location tested, and soil is a likely reservoir of S. troglodytae. These findings strengthen the association between S. troglodytae and ENGS and have implications for sanctuary management and conservation of western chimpanzees.

非洲黑猩猩和环境中穴居人肌肉的分布和流行。
介绍。自2005年以来,塞拉利昂Tacugama黑猩猩保护区(TCS)西部黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes verus)死亡的主要原因一直是兽疫性神经系统和胃肠综合征(ENGS),与类人猿肌肉菌(梭菌科)有关。差距的声明。在临床正常黑猩猩和环境中,在TCS的流行程度仍然未知,就像它在非洲其他圈养和野生黑猩猩种群及其环境中的分布一样。本研究的目的是确定非洲保护区和野生黑猩猩种群中肌酸菌的分布和流行程度,并确定黑猩猩和环境中类人猿的人口统计学和生态风险因素。我们在TCS的黑猩猩和环境中进行了前瞻性、多季节的类人猿流行病学调查,并在刚果共和国的一个保护区进行了平行研究。我们还描述了对乌干达一个保护区的黑猩猩以及塞拉利昂和乌干达的野生黑猩猩种群的调查结果。本研究共对637个黑猩猩和环境样本进行了检测,分别采用了类人猿类人猿的物种特异性PCR和泛sarcina PCR。在TCS (n=60)黑猩猩中,旱季(96.7%)穴居人比雨季(55.2%)更为普遍。土壤是该细菌最常见的环境源(旱季54%,雨季4.8%)。值得注意的是,我们没有在刚果共和国保护区黑猩猩(n=79)和塞拉利昂野生黑猩猩(n=18)的粪便样本中检测到类人猿。我们确实在东非黑猩猩(n=84)中检测到了这种细菌,但患病率很低(2.6%-10.9%)。相比之下,我们发现Sarcina属在所有黑猩猩种群中普遍存在,并且在保护区黑猩猩中的患病率(93.1%-100%)高于野生黑猩猩(66.7%-68.4%)。在TCS(唯一受ENGS影响的地点),类人猿明显比其他测试地点更为普遍,土壤可能是类人猿的储存库。这些发现加强了类人猿与ENGS之间的联系,并对西部黑猩猩的保护区管理和保护具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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