Birds (Mar 2024)

Parrot Trade and the Potential Risk of Psittacosis as a Zoonotic Disease in Indonesian Bird Markets

  • Abdullah Abdullah,
  • Ahmad Ardiansyah,
  • Michela Balestri,
  • Marco Campera,
  • Jessica Chavez,
  • Tungga Dewi,
  • Anna Fourage,
  • Emma L. Hankinson,
  • Katherine Hedger,
  • Boyd Leupen,
  • Sophie Manson,
  • Thais Q. Morcatty,
  • K. A. I. Nekaris,
  • Vincent Nijman,
  • Paula E. R. Pereyra,
  • Erly Sintya,
  • Magdalena S. Svensson,
  • Meng Xie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/birds5010010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 137 – 154

Abstract

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Wildlife trade, both legal and illegal, is increasingly recognized as a key factor in the rise of emerging viral infectious diseases, and this is especially apparent in Asia, where large numbers of wildlife are openly offered for sale in bird markets. We here focus on the risk of Psittacosis becoming a zoonotic disease in the wildlife markets of Java and Bali, Indonesia. Psittacosis is particularly prevalent in parrots (hence the name), and the trade in parrots was instrumental in the Great Parrot Fever Pandemic in 1929/1930. Between 2014 and 2023, we conducted 176 surveys of 14 bird markets, during which we recorded 4446 largely wild-caught parrots for sale. On average, each market had nine genera on offer, and the diversity of genera increased with the increasing presence of parrots (up to 16 genera). For most of the bird markets during each survey, parrots from different genera and originating from different parts of the world, were offered for sale alongside each other. Genera offered for sale together did not cluster into natural (geographic) groups. We found no temporal difference in the sale of parrots. We conclude that the omnipresence of wild-caught parrots from various geographic regions in large numbers within the same bird markets increases the risk that psittacosis is present and that this poses a real risk for the zoonotic spread of avian chlamydiosis to humans.

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