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Author Notes:

Address correspondence to Rebecca S. Levine, Department of Environmental Sciences, Emory University, 400 Dowman Drive, Math and Science Center 5th Floor, Suite E510, Atlanta, GA 30322. E-mail: rclevin@alum.emory.edu

We thank the many students in the vector ecology lab at Emory University who assisted in trapping and processing birds and mosquitoes; Luis Chaves and Gonzalo Vazquez-Prokopec for suggestions on the study design; Jamie Phillips for assistance with preparing samples for sequencing; Jennifer Abi Younes for assistance with reverse transcription PCR; Monica Macdonald and Emily Boothe for assistance with ELISA assays; and Paula Marcet for advice on sample quality control.

We also thank James Ballance at Zoo Atlanta, Chris Nelson and Mary Moerlins at the Piedmont Park Conservancy, Chris Showalter at Fernbank Science Center, Jamie Blackburn and Tracy McClendon at Atlanta Botanical Garden, and the residents of the Grant Park and Piedmont Park neighborhoods who graciously allowed us to trap birds and mosquitoes on their property.

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Research Funding:

Funding for this research was provided by National Institutes of Health (NIH) training grant 5T32AI055404-08 (L. Real, PI), Emory University Department of Environmental Science, and University of Georgia Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study (SCWDS).

Supersuppression: Reservoir Competency and Timing of Mosquito Host Shifts Combine to Reduce Spillover of West Nile Virus

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Journal Title:

American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

Volume:

Volume 95, Number 5

Publisher:

, Pages 1174-1184

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

In the eastern United States, human cases of West Nile virus (WNV) result from spillover from urban epizootic transmission between passerine birds and Culex mosquitoes. In Atlanta, GA, substantial WNV presence in hosts and vectors has not resulted in the human disease burden observed in cities with similar infection pressure. Our study goal was to investigate extrinsic ecological conditions that potentially contribute to these reduced transmission rates. We conducted WNV surveillance among hosts and vectors in urban Atlanta and recorded an overall avian seroprevalence of nearly 30%, which was significantly higher among northern cardinals, blue jays, and members of the mimid family, and notably low among American robins. Examination of temporal Culex feeding patterns showed a marked feeding shift from American robins in the early season to northern cardinals in the late season. We therefore rule out American robins as superspreaders in the Atlanta area and suggest instead that northern cardinals and mimids act as WNV “supersuppressor” species, which slow WNV transmission by drawing many infectious bites during the critical virus amplification period, yet failing to amplify transmission due to low host competencies. Of particular interest, urban forest patches provide spillover protection by increasing the WNV amplification fraction on supersuppressor species.

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©The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

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