Expanded Molecular Typing of Sarcoptes scabiei Provides Further Evidence of Disease Spillover Events in the Epidemiology of Sarcoptic Mange in Australian Marsupials

The invasive ectoparasite Sarcoptes scabiei affects the welfare and conservation of Australian marsupials. Molecular data suggest that spillover from other hosts may be responsible for the emergence of this infectious disease, but the scale of such studies is limited. We performed expanded molecular...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Main Authors: Fraser, Tamieka A, Holme, Roz, Martin, Alynn, Whiteley, Pam, Montarello, Merridy, Raw, Cam, Carver, Scott, Polkinghorne, A
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wildlife Disease Association, Inc. 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7589/2018-04-101
_version_ 1821488060314943488
author Fraser, Tamieka A
Holme, Roz
Martin, Alynn
Whiteley, Pam
Montarello, Merridy
Raw, Cam
Carver, Scott
Polkinghorne, A
author_facet Fraser, Tamieka A
Holme, Roz
Martin, Alynn
Whiteley, Pam
Montarello, Merridy
Raw, Cam
Carver, Scott
Polkinghorne, A
author_sort Fraser, Tamieka A
collection University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia: COAST Research Database
container_issue 1
container_start_page 231
container_title Journal of Wildlife Diseases
container_volume 55
description The invasive ectoparasite Sarcoptes scabiei affects the welfare and conservation of Australian marsupials. Molecular data suggest that spillover from other hosts may be responsible for the emergence of this infectious disease, but the scale of such studies is limited. We performed expanded molecular typing of the S. scabiei mitochondrial cox1 gene from 81 skin scrapings from infested wombats (Vombatus ursinus), koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus), red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), and dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) across Australia. Combined with existing S. scabiei sequences, our analysis revealed 16 haplotypes among Australian animals, sharing between 93.3% and 99.7% sequence similarity. While some sequences were unique to specific hosts or to Australia, key haplotypes could be detected across several marsupial hosts as well as to wild or domestic canids in Australia. We identified 43 cox1 haplotypes with many Australian haplotypes identical to S. scabiei mites from inside and outside Europe. We concluded that multiple introduction events were plausible explanations to the origin and emergence of this parasite into Australian marsupials and that disease spillover from canids was likely. Together, our greatly expanded S. scabiei sequence dataset provided a more nuanced picture of both spillover and sustained intraspecific transmission for this important parasite.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
id ftunivscoast:usc:26786
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftunivscoast
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7589/2018-04-101
op_relation usc:26786
URN:ISSN: 0090-3558
publishDate 2019
publisher Wildlife Disease Association, Inc.
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivscoast:usc:26786 2025-01-16T21:26:05+00:00 Expanded Molecular Typing of Sarcoptes scabiei Provides Further Evidence of Disease Spillover Events in the Epidemiology of Sarcoptic Mange in Australian Marsupials Fraser, Tamieka A Holme, Roz Martin, Alynn Whiteley, Pam Montarello, Merridy Raw, Cam Carver, Scott Polkinghorne, A 2019 https://doi.org/10.7589/2018-04-101 eng eng Wildlife Disease Association, Inc. usc:26786 URN:ISSN: 0090-3558 FoR 0608 (Zoology) FoR 0707 (Veterinary Sciences) epidemiology intraspecific transmission molecular typing Sarcoptes scabiei scabies spillover Journal Article 2019 ftunivscoast https://doi.org/10.7589/2018-04-101 2019-02-25T23:25:47Z The invasive ectoparasite Sarcoptes scabiei affects the welfare and conservation of Australian marsupials. Molecular data suggest that spillover from other hosts may be responsible for the emergence of this infectious disease, but the scale of such studies is limited. We performed expanded molecular typing of the S. scabiei mitochondrial cox1 gene from 81 skin scrapings from infested wombats (Vombatus ursinus), koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus), red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), and dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) across Australia. Combined with existing S. scabiei sequences, our analysis revealed 16 haplotypes among Australian animals, sharing between 93.3% and 99.7% sequence similarity. While some sequences were unique to specific hosts or to Australia, key haplotypes could be detected across several marsupial hosts as well as to wild or domestic canids in Australia. We identified 43 cox1 haplotypes with many Australian haplotypes identical to S. scabiei mites from inside and outside Europe. We concluded that multiple introduction events were plausible explanations to the origin and emergence of this parasite into Australian marsupials and that disease spillover from canids was likely. Together, our greatly expanded S. scabiei sequence dataset provided a more nuanced picture of both spillover and sustained intraspecific transmission for this important parasite. Article in Journal/Newspaper Canis lupus University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia: COAST Research Database Journal of Wildlife Diseases 55 1 231
spellingShingle FoR 0608 (Zoology)
FoR 0707 (Veterinary Sciences)
epidemiology
intraspecific transmission
molecular typing
Sarcoptes scabiei
scabies
spillover
Fraser, Tamieka A
Holme, Roz
Martin, Alynn
Whiteley, Pam
Montarello, Merridy
Raw, Cam
Carver, Scott
Polkinghorne, A
Expanded Molecular Typing of Sarcoptes scabiei Provides Further Evidence of Disease Spillover Events in the Epidemiology of Sarcoptic Mange in Australian Marsupials
title Expanded Molecular Typing of Sarcoptes scabiei Provides Further Evidence of Disease Spillover Events in the Epidemiology of Sarcoptic Mange in Australian Marsupials
title_full Expanded Molecular Typing of Sarcoptes scabiei Provides Further Evidence of Disease Spillover Events in the Epidemiology of Sarcoptic Mange in Australian Marsupials
title_fullStr Expanded Molecular Typing of Sarcoptes scabiei Provides Further Evidence of Disease Spillover Events in the Epidemiology of Sarcoptic Mange in Australian Marsupials
title_full_unstemmed Expanded Molecular Typing of Sarcoptes scabiei Provides Further Evidence of Disease Spillover Events in the Epidemiology of Sarcoptic Mange in Australian Marsupials
title_short Expanded Molecular Typing of Sarcoptes scabiei Provides Further Evidence of Disease Spillover Events in the Epidemiology of Sarcoptic Mange in Australian Marsupials
title_sort expanded molecular typing of sarcoptes scabiei provides further evidence of disease spillover events in the epidemiology of sarcoptic mange in australian marsupials
topic FoR 0608 (Zoology)
FoR 0707 (Veterinary Sciences)
epidemiology
intraspecific transmission
molecular typing
Sarcoptes scabiei
scabies
spillover
topic_facet FoR 0608 (Zoology)
FoR 0707 (Veterinary Sciences)
epidemiology
intraspecific transmission
molecular typing
Sarcoptes scabiei
scabies
spillover
url https://doi.org/10.7589/2018-04-101