34 research outputs found

    Natural Cross Chlamydial Infection between Livestock and Free-Living Bird Species

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    The study of cross-species pathogen transmission is essential to understanding the epizootiology and epidemiology of infectious diseases. Avian chlamydiosis is a zoonotic disease whose effects have been mainly investigated in humans, poultry and pet birds. It has been suggested that wild bird species play an important role as reservoirs for this disease. During a comparative health status survey in common (Falco tinnunculus) and lesser (Falco naumanni) kestrel populations in Spain, acute gammapathies were detected. We investigated whether gammapathies were associated with Chlamydiaceae infections. We recorded the prevalence of different Chlamydiaceae species in nestlings of both kestrel species in three different study areas. Chlamydophila psittaci serovar I (or Chlamydophila abortus), an ovine pathogen causing late-term abortions, was isolated from all the nestlings of both kestrel species in one of the three studied areas, a location with extensive ovine livestock enzootic of this atypical bacteria and where gammapathies were recorded. Serovar and genetic cluster analysis of the kestrel isolates from this area showed serovars A and C and the genetic cluster 1 and were different than those isolated from the other two areas. The serovar I in this area was also isolated from sheep abortions, sheep faeces, sheep stable dust, nest dust of both kestrel species, carrion beetles (Silphidae) and Orthoptera. This fact was not observed in other areas. In addition, we found kestrels to be infected by Chlamydia suis and Chlamydia muridarum, the first time these have been detected in birds. Our study evidences a pathogen transmission from ruminants to birds, highlighting the importance of this potential and unexplored mechanism of infection in an ecological context. On the other hand, it is reported a pathogen transmission from livestock to wildlife, revealing new and scarcely investigated anthropogenic threats for wild and endangered species

    The responses of an anaerobic microorganism, Yersinia intermedia MASE-LG-1 to individual and combined simulated Martian stresses

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    The limits of life of aerobic microorganisms are well understood, but the responses of anaerobic microorganisms to individual and combined extreme stressors are less well known. Motivated by an interest in understanding the survivability of anaerobic microorganisms under Martian conditions, we investigated the responses of a new isolate, Yersinia intermedia MASE-LG-1 to individual and combined stresses associated with the Martian surface. This organism belongs to an adaptable and persistent genus of anaerobic microorganisms found in many environments worldwide. The effects of desiccation, low pressure, ionizing radiation, varying temperature, osmotic pressure, and oxidizing chemical compounds were investigated. The strain showed a high tolerance to desiccation, with a decline of survivability by four orders of magnitude during a storage time of 85 days. Exposure to X-rays resulted in dose-dependent inactivation for exposure up to 600 Gy while applied doses above 750 Gy led to complete inactivation. The effects of the combination of desiccation and irradiation were additive and the survivability was influenced by the order in which they were imposed. Ionizing irradiation and subsequent desiccation was more deleterious than vice versa. By contrast, the presence of perchlorates was not found to significantly affect the survival of the Yersinia strain after ionizing radiation. These data show that the organism has the capacity to survive and grow in physical and chemical stresses, imposed individually or in combination that are associated with Martian environment. Eventually it lost its viability showing that many of the most adaptable anaerobic organisms on Earth would be killed on Mars today

    Participação do nitrogênio na indução de injúrias foliares e na eficácia do herbicida glyphosate

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    Com o objetivo de avaliar diferentes aspectos da participação do nitrogênio na indução de injúrias foliares e na eficácia do herbicida glyphosate, foram desenvolvidos três experimentos, sendo dois em casa de vegetação, com as espécies Avena strigosa e Ipomoea triloba + Sorghum halepense, e um em campo, com Brachiaria decumbens. Avaliou-se a aplicação de glyphosate combinado com ureia (U), com sulfato de amônio (SA) e com U+AS, além de fertilização prévia do solo com nitrogênio e pulverização de caldas concentradas com até 20% de N. A pulverização de caldas concentradas com até 20% de N não dessecou adequadamente as espécies A. strigosa e B. decumbens, provocando danos máximos de cerca de 30%. A utilização de solução de SA ou de U+SA como veículo de pulverização do glyphosate elevou o controle de I. triloba. As soluções nitrogenadas aceleraram a atividade do glyphosate para dessecação de S. halepense, porém, sem diferenças visíveis aos 28 dias após aplicação. A escolha da dose adequada de glyphosate (1.800 g ha-1) para dessecação de B. decumbens foi fundamental para obtenção de elevado controle, sendo que a única alternativa que elevou a eficácia da menor dose do produto foi a fertilização prévia do solo com 150 kg ha-1 de SA
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