Sarcoptic mange in wild ruminants in Spain : solving the epidemiological enigma using microsatellite markers

Author

Moroni, Barbara

Angelone, Samer

Pérez Jiménez, Jesús María

Molinar Min, Anna Rita

Pasquetti, Mario

Tizzani, Paolo

López Olvera, Jorge R.

Valldeperes, Marta

Granados Torres, José Enrique

Lavín González, Santiago

Mentaberre García, Gregorio

Camacho-Sillero, Leonor

Martínez-Carrasco, Carlos

Oleaga, Alvaro

Candela, Mónica G

Meneguz, Pier Giuseppe

Rossi, Luca

Publication date

2021

Abstract

Altres ajuts: PAIDI/JA/RNM.118


In Spain, sarcoptic mange was first described in native wildlife in 1987 in Cazorla Natural Park, causing the death of nearly 95% of the local native population of Iberian ibex (Capra pyrenaica). Since then, additional outbreaks have been identified in several populations of ibex and other wild ungulate species throughout the country. Although the first epizootic outbreak in wildlife was attributed to the introduction of an infected herd of domestic goats, the origin and the cause of its persistence remain unclear. The main aims of this study are to understand (i) the number of Sarcoptes scabiei " strains" circulating in wild ruminant populations in Spain, and (ii) the molecular epidemiological relationships between S. scabiei and its hosts. Ten Sarcoptes microsatellite markers were used to characterize the genetic structure of 266 mites obtained from skin scrapings of 121 mangy wild ruminants between 2011 and 2019 from 11 areas in Spain. Seventy-three different alleles and 37 private alleles were detected. The results of this study show the existence of three genetic strains of S. scabiei in the wild ruminant populations investigated. While two genetic clusters of S. scabiei were host- and geography-related, one cluster included multi-host mites deriving from geographically distant populations. The molecular epidemiological study of S. scabiei in wild ruminants in Spain indicates that the spreading and persistence of the parasite may be conditioned by host species community composition and the permissiveness of each host population/community to the circulation of individual "strains," among other factors. Wildlife-livestock interactions and the role of human-driven introduction or trade of wild and domestic animals should be better investigated to prevent further spread of sarcoptic mange in as yet unaffected natural areas of the Iberian Peninsula. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13071-021-04673-x.

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Sarna; Remugants; Sarcoptes scabiei; Ruminant populations; Spain; Wildlife; Molecular markers; Molecular epidemiology; Host specificity; Genetic structure

Publisher

 

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Rights

open access

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