Author(s) |
Fancourt, Bronwyn A
Nicol, Stewart C
Hawkins, Clare E
Jones, Menna E
Johnson, Chris N
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Publication Date |
2014-08
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Abstract |
Disease is often considered a key threat to species of conservation significance. For some, it has resulted in localised extinctions and declines in range and abundance. However, for some species, the assertion that a disease poses a significant threat of extinction is based solely on correlative or anecdotal evidence, often inferred from individual clinical case reports. While a species' susceptibility to a disease may be demonstrated in a number of individuals, investigations rarely extend to measuring the impact of disease at the population level and its contribution, if any, to population declines. The eastern quoll (<I>Dasyurus viverrinus</I>) is a medium-sized Australian marsupial carnivore that is undergoing severe and rapid decline in Tasmania, its last refuge. Reasons for the decline are currently not understood. Feral cats (<I>Felis catus</I>) may be undergoing competitive release following the ongoing decline of the Tasmanian devil (<I>Sarcophilus harrisii</I>), with cats suppressing eastern quolls through increased predation, competition, exclusion or exposure to diseases such as toxoplasmosis. To investigate the effects of <I>Toxoplasma gondii</I> infection, eastern quoll populations at four sites were regularly screened for the seroprevalence of <I>T. gondii</I>-specific IgG antibodies. Seroprevalence was approximately five times higher at sites with declining quoll populations, and there was a negative association between seroprevalence and quoll abundance. However, <I>T. gondii</I> infection did not reduce quoll survival or reproduction. Despite a high susceptibility to <I>T. gondii</I> infection, eastern quoll populations do not appear to be limited by the parasite or its resultant disease. Significantly higher seroprevalence is a signal of greater exposure to feral cats at sites where eastern quolls are declining, suggesting that increased predation, competition or exclusion by feral cats may be precipitating population declines.
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Citation |
International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife, 3(2), p. 102-112
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ISSN |
2213-2244
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Pubmed ID |
25161908
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Link | |
Publisher |
Elsevier Ltd
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Rights |
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 International
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Title |
Beyond the disease: Is Toxoplasma gondii infection causing population declines in the eastern quoll (Dasyurus viverrinus)?
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Type of document |
Journal Article
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Entity Type |
Publication
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Name | Size | format | Description | Link |
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openpublished/BeyondFancourt2014JournalArticle.pdf | 1134.271 KB | application/pdf | Published version | View document |