Veterinary Sciences (Jun 2024)

West Nile Virus Seroprevalence in Wild Birds and Equines in Madrid Province, Spain

  • Richard A. J. Williams,
  • Hillary A. Criollo Valencia,
  • Irene López Márquez,
  • Fernando González González,
  • Francisco Llorente,
  • Miguel Ángel Jiménez-Clavero,
  • Núria Busquets,
  • Marta Mateo Barrientos,
  • Gustavo Ortiz-Díez,
  • Tania Ayllón Santiago

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci11060259
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 6
p. 259

Abstract

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West Nile virus (WNV) is a re-emerging flavivirus, primarily circulating among avian hosts and mosquito vectors, causing periodic outbreaks in humans and horses, often leading to neuroinvasive disease and mortality. Spain has reported several outbreaks, most notably in 2020 with seventy-seven human cases and eight fatalities. WNV has been serologically detected in horses in the Community of Madrid, but to our knowledge, it has never been reported from wild birds in this region. To estimate the seroprevalence of WNV in wild birds and horses in the Community of Madrid, 159 wild birds at a wildlife rescue center and 25 privately owned equines were sampled. Serum from thirteen birds (8.2%) and one equine (4.0%) tested positive with a WNV competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (cELISA) designed for WNV antibody detection but sensitive to cross-reacting antibodies to other flaviviruses. Virus-neutralization test (VNT) confirmed WNV antibodies in four bird samples (2.5%), and antibodies to undetermined flavivirus in four additional samples. One equine sample (4.0%) tested positive for WNV by VNT, although this horse previously resided in a WN-endemic area. ELISA-positive birds included both migratory and resident species, juveniles and adults. Two seropositive juvenile birds suggest local flavivirus transmission within the Community of Madrid, while WNV seropositive adult birds may have been infected outside Madrid. The potential circulation of flaviviruses, including WNV, in birds in the Madrid Community raises concerns, although further surveillance of mosquitoes, wild birds, and horses in Madrid is necessary to establish the extent of transmission and the principal species involved.

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