The Dispersal of Rodent-Borne Strains of Aphanoascus Keratinophilus and Chrysosporium Tropicum by Pellets of Predatory Birds

Author:

Ciesielska Anita1,Korniłłowicz-Kowalska Teresa2,Kitowski Ignacy3,Bohacz Justyna2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbial Genetics, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Protection, University of Łódź, Banacha 12/16, 90-237 Łódź, Poland

2. Department of Environmental Microbiology, Laboratory of Mycology, University of Life Sciences in Lublin, Leszczyńskiego 7, 20-069 Lublin, Poland

3. State School of Higher Education in Chełm, Pocztowa 54, 22-100 Chełm, Poland

Abstract

The species composition of keratinophilic fungi in 153 pellets of nine species of predatory birds was analysed. Based on morphological criteria, a total of 439 strains of non-dermatophytic fungi of the Chrysosporium group were isolated and identified. Dermatophytes were not detected. The collection was verified using molecular methods, such as PCR-RFLP (restriction fragments length polymorphism) and two potentially pathogenic species, Aphanoascus keratinophilus and Chrysosporium tropicum, were detected. Pellet colonisation by these fungi ranged between 37.5% and 91.7% depending on the bird species. As the analysis of undigested remains found in the pellets showed, rodents, mostly Microtus, which constituted from 57% to 100% of the birds’ diet, were a chief source of A. keratinophilus and Ch. tropicum strains. It was demonstrated that the survival and dispersal of A. keratinophilus strains was supported by higher pellet moisture while those of Ch. tropicum strains by drying, which was conditioned by the site where pellets were dropped and deposited by individual species of predatory birds. Based on the results, circulation routes of both opportunistic pathogens using pellets of predatory birds as carriers are proposed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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