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Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 41(2), 2005, pp. 342-353
© Wildlife Disease Association  2005
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CHARACTERIZATION OF CANARYPOX-LIKE VIRUSES INFECTING ENDEMIC BIRDS IN THE GALÁPAGOS ISLANDS

Teresa Thiel1, Noah K. Whiteman1, Ana Tirapé2,3, Maria Ines Baquero2,4, Virna Cedeño2,3,4, Tim Walsh5,6,7, Gustavo Jiménez Uzcátegui6 and Patricia G. Parker1,5

1 Department of Biology, University of Missouri–St. Louis, Missouri 63121, USA
2 Laboratory of Fabricio Valverde, Galápagos National Park, Isla Santa Cruz, Galápagos, Ecuador
3 Concepto Azul, Guayaquil, Ecuador
4 Biotechnology Program, University of Guayaquil, Guayaquil, Ecuador
5 Charles Darwin Research Station, Puerto Ayora, Isla Santa Cruz, Galápagos, Ecuador

7 Corresponding author (email: pparker{at}umsl.edu)

ABSTRACT:   The presence of avian pox in endemic birds in the Galápagos Islands has led to concern that the health of these birds may be threatened by avipoxvirus introduction by domestic birds. We describe here a simple polymerase chain reaction–based method for identification and discrimination of avipoxvirus strains similar to the fowlpox or canarypox viruses. This method, in conjunction with DNA sequencing of two polymerase chain reaction–amplified loci totaling about 800 bp, was used to identify two avipoxvirus strains, Gal1 and Gal2, in pox lesions from yellow warblers (Dendroica petechia), finches (Geospiza spp.), and Galápagos mockingbirds (Nesomimus parvulus) from the inhabited islands of Santa Cruz and Isabela. Both strains were found in all three passerine taxa, and sequences from both strains were less than 5% different from each other and from canarypox virus. In contrast, chickens in Galápagos were infected with a virus that appears to be identical in sequence to the characterized fowlpox virus and about 30% different from the canarypox/Galápagos group viruses in the regions sequenced. These results indicate the presence of canarypox-like viruses in endemic passerine birds that are distinct from the fowlpox virus infecting chickens on Galápagos. Alignment of the sequence of a 5.9-kb region of the genome revealed that sequence identities among Gal1, Gal2, and canarypox viruses were clustered in discrete regions. This indicates that recombination between poxvirus strains in combination with mutation led to the canarypox-like viruses that are now prevalent in the Galápagos.
  Key words:  Avian pox, avipoxvirus, canary pox, fowlpox, Galápagos.

6 Current address: Washington State University, Washington Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory, Pullman, Washington 99165-2037, USA




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