西尼罗河病毒对黑嘴喜鹊种群的影响

Daniel M. Taylor, C. Trost
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摘要

摘要西尼罗病毒(WNV)是一种已知能有效杀死黑嘴喜鹊(Pica hudsonia)的动物传染病病毒。在美国西部出现人类感染西尼罗河病毒后,圣诞节鸟类计数(CBC)上黑嘴喜鹊每派对小时的鸟类数量显著下降。CBC和种鸟调查(BBS)的趋势从人类感染西尼罗河病毒前的阳性转变为西尼罗河病毒感染期间的阴性,然后在西尼罗河病毒感染下降后反弹为阳性。加拿大黑嘴喜鹊在人类感染西尼罗河病毒前后的CBC无显著差异。在感染西尼罗河病毒前后,加拿大喜鹊的CBC和BBS呈阳性趋势,而在西尼罗河病毒感染期间呈阴性趋势。西尼罗河病毒的入侵在整个大陆的时间上是不同的,在西尼罗河病毒入侵一个地区后,黑嘴喜鹊一直表现出显著的、经常是戏剧性的下降。南部草原地区受影响较为严重,堪萨斯州和内布拉斯加州等草原州的CBC和BBS在西尼罗河病毒入侵后出现明显下降,从入侵前的正趋势转变为入侵期间和入侵后的负趋势。西尼罗河病毒可能引发或加速了该地区黑嘴喜鹊活动范围的缩小。草原北部地区受影响较小。大部分南部和中部落基山脉、山间和太平洋地区的黑嘴喜鹊种群受到西尼罗河病毒感染的负面影响显著。在这些黑嘴喜鹊密度较高的地区,如科罗拉多州、内华达州和爱达荷州,在西尼罗河病毒入侵期间,黑嘴喜鹊数量急剧下降,但西尼罗河病毒感染下降后,黑嘴喜鹊数量呈上升趋势,这是种群恢复的迹象。随着西尼罗河病毒的入侵,加利福尼亚的种群数量显著下降,并没有恢复。北部和高海拔地区的种群很少或没有受到西尼罗河病毒的影响,种群数量通常稳定或增加。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
WEST NILE VIRUS IMPACTS ON BLACK-BILLED MAGPIE POPULATIONS
Abstract West Nile Virus (WNV) is an epizootic virus known to effectively kill Black-billed Magpies (Pica hudsonia). After WNV infection of humans appeared in the western United States, Black-billed Magpies birds per party-hours on Christmas Bird Counts (CBC) declined significantly. Trends for both CBC and Breeding Bird Surveys (BBS) shifted from positive before WNV infections of humans to negative during WNV infections, then rebounded to positive after WNV infection declined. Black-billed Magpies in Canada had no significant differences on CBC before or after WNV infections of humans. Canadian magpies had positive trends both before and after WNV infections on both CBC and BBS, but with negative trends during WNV infections. WNV invasion varied temporally across the continent, and Black-billed Magpies consistently showed significant and often dramatic declines soon after WNV invasion of a region. The southern Prairie region was severely hit, with Prairie states such as Kansas and Nebraska showing significant declines on CBC after WNV invasion, shifting from positive trends on CBC and BBS before invasion to negative trends during and after WNV invasion. WNV has potentially triggered or accelerated a retraction of Black-billed Magpie range in this region. The northern part of the Prairie region was less affected. Most southern and central Rocky Mountain, Intermountain, and Pacific region Black-billed Magpie populations showed significant negative effects from WNV infections. States in these regions with higher densities of Black-billed Magpies such as Colorado, Nevada, and Idaho showed significant dramatic declines during WNV invasion, but positive trends after WNV infections declined, a sign of recovering populations. California populations significantly declined with WNV invasion and have not recovered. Populations in northern and higher-elevation regions had little or no impact from WNV and populations were often stable or increasing.
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