AI Article Synopsis

  • Our understanding of viruses in wild animals is limited, and studying viral diversity in non-traditional hosts and remote areas is essential for broader insights.
  • Wild birds play a significant role in the spread of diseases, yet our knowledge of their viral communities is often skewed towards poultry and severe diseases.
  • Research comparing the fecal virome of birds in a remote rainforest in French Guiana and a Mediterranean forest in Spain reveals that pristine environments may harbor unique and previously unknown viruses, emphasizing the need to explore these areas to expand our understanding of viral diversity.

Article Abstract

Our understanding about viruses carried by wild animals is still scarce. The viral diversity of wildlife may be best described with discovery-driven approaches to the study of viral diversity that broaden research efforts towards non-canonical hosts and remote geographic regions. Birds have been key organisms in the transmission of viruses causing important diseases, and wild birds are threatened by viral spillovers associated with human activities. However, our knowledge of the avian virome may be biased towards poultry and highly pathogenic diseases. We describe and compare the fecal virome of two passerine-dominated bird assemblages sampled in a remote Neotropical rainforest in French Guiana (Nouragues Natural Reserve) and a Mediterranean forest in central Spain (La Herrería). We used metagenomic data to quantify the degree of functional and genetic novelty of viruses recovered by examining if the similarity of the contigs we obtained to reference sequences differed between both locations. In general, contigs from Nouragues were significantly less similar to viruses in databases than contigs from La Herrería using Blastn but not for Blastx, suggesting that pristine regions harbor a yet unknown viral diversity with genetically more singular viruses than more studied areas. Additionally, we describe putative novel viruses of the families , and . These results highlight the importance of wild animals and remote regions as sources of novel viruses that substantially broaden the current knowledge of the global diversity of viruses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7761369PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8121869DOI Listing

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