By Peter
Daszak
This
article was first
posted on The
Scientist: The News Journal for the Life Scientist.
Sometime in the 1980s,
the emerging infectious disease (EID) movement began. The "emerging"
label had been used earlier, but a series of high-profile disease
outbreaks in the 1980s, combined with perceived funding gaps, began
to galvanize the field. A book by Richard Krause of the National
Institutes of Health (Krause 1981) formed part
of the initial thrust. Published in the same year as the recognition
of AIDS, it commented on the alarming phenomenon of antibiotic-resistant
microbes. Further threats surfaced: Legionnaire's disease,
toxic shock syndrome, multiple-drug resistance in a
host of important pathogens, Lyme disease, and others.
The year 1992 saw the
publication of an Institute of Medicine treatise on emerging infections
(Lederberg 1992), and a special section in
Science talked about a "post-antimicrobial era,"
tuberculosis as a "reemergent killer," and the "crisis
in antibiotic resistance." This was rapidly followed by Emerging
Viruses by Stephen S. Morse of Rockefeller University (1993),
and another Science section included a high-profile plea to close
the surveillance gap for these EIDs (Berkelman
1994).
By the mid-1990s, a new
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) journal, Emerging
Infectious Diseases (edited by Joseph E. McDade), a
rash of popular books, and the continual flow of newly discovered
pathogens and globally reemerging diseases firmly established the
field.
The message reached Congress,
which appropriated funds for public health surveillance, infrastructure
to combat bioterrorism threats, and new approaches to outbreak investigation.
Now
Wildlife
Now, some 20 years after
the first rumblings of the EID threat, a growing interest in emerging
diseases of wildlife is repeating the pattern. Wildlife EIDs are "one
of the most significant, yet underestimated and underfunded, anthropogenic
threats to biodiversity conservation," says Andrew A. Cunningham,
a veterinarian pathologist at the Zoological Society of London. Cunningham,
coauthor on a recent Science review that defines this group of diseases
(Daszak 2000), has spent the last 15 years
working on the role of diseases in conservation programs for captive
and wild animals.
Cunningham is part of
a group that recently described a fungal disease of amphibians, chytridiomycosis,
which is causing die-offs in Australia and Central America (Berger
1998). Dramatic amphibian declines in these areas have included
the extinction of the golden toad of Costa Rica and two species of
gastric brooding frog (Rheobatrachus spp.) in Australia. While
habitat loss and other factors are involved in amphibian declines
elsewhere, the discovery of chytridiomycosis helps to explain the
so-called "pristine rainforest declines" that have puzzled
herpetologists. In a rare example of a conservation body (Environment
Australia) funding disease investigations, veterinarian Lee Berger,
working in virologist Alex D. Hyatt's lab at the Australian
Animal Health Laboratory of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial
Research Organization, first discovered the disease in 1997.
"One of our group's
key roles is to identify the new and unusual," says Hyatt, codiscoverer
of equine morbillivirus (Hendra virus) and other emerging
Australian viruses. "We originally began characterizing iridoviruses
from amphibians as part of a biocontrol program for the cane toad,
and it's this work that put in place the infrastructure to look at
diseases of amphibians."
But this previously unknown
pathogen is simply the latest in a string of disease outbreaks that
are changing the way conservationists view disease. This extensive
EID list includes marine mammal morbillivirus diseases,
mycoplasmal conjunctivitis in house finches, coral diseases,
African wild dog rabies, and kangaroo blindness. An
early wake-up call for the impact of wildlife EID came in 1985, with
an epizootic of canine distemper in Park County, Wyoming. This viral
disease of domestic dogs is unusual in its wide range of susceptible
hosts, including -- dramatically in this case -- the black-footed
ferret (Mustela nigripes). The black-footed ferret, once common
on the prairies and badlands of the United States, is ideally suited
to its habitat and solely dependent on prairie dogs as prey.
The gradual conversion
of prairie to agriculture and destruction of prairie dog towns led
to a unique situation in the 1970s: With only one small population
of ferrets known in the wild and a handful in captivity, both of which
rapidly died out, the species was considered extinct. Its rediscovery
in 1981 led to a series of crucial events that culminated in the near
actual extinction of the species. The first threat was an outbreak
of sylvatic plague in 1985 in the prairie dog towns that supported
the ferret populations. To maintain the prey base for the ferret,
the largest non-public health, nonurban sylvatic plague control effort
was conducted and the disease managed. As the planned development
of a captive breeding program progressed, population surveys of the
ferret revealed a drastic decline, and wild ferrets captured for breeding
began to die of canine distemper.
The small population that
survived the outbreak in the wild was considered insufficient to preserve
the species, and the radical strategy to capture the whole remaining
population for captive breeding began. The strategy of making a species
temporarily extinct in the wild won through, with the first babies
being born in 1987.
But the critics were harsh,
according to Tom Thorne of the Wyoming Game and Fish Department
and team leader of the management effort. "In my professional
career I have never experienced pressure like that. We came extremely
close to extinction in '85-'86, and criticism came from a multitude
of angles. The discussion on whether to capture the remaining ferrets
after we'd diagnosed canine distemper was particularly heated. Some
groups had even argued that we should let the species become extinct."
Endangering
Endangered Species
The lesson learned was
that infectious diseases are a significant threat to the management
of endangered species. Ongoing developments in host-parasite population
biology bolstered this. Andy Dobson of Princeton University,
working with models of host-parasite dynamics, has emphasized the
importance of disease in conservation for the last 15 years. Building
on developments in the epidemiology of human diseases, Dobson and
others have shown that parasites are crucial in moderating animal
populations and, in some circumstances, can have a devastating impact
on small or fragmented populations.
"Parasites and infectious
diseases are the forgotten half of biodiversity and have a significant
impact on the way communities are structured and function," says
Dobson. In the past, this impact has been underestimated or misjudged.
"Despite a greater appreciation of the role parasites play in
natural populations, there remains a confusion over how to manage
for disease threats. For example, conservation biologists remain confused
and overanxious that the potential benefits of corridors that link
populations might act to aid in disease transmission," says Dobson.
Management may be crucial:
Dobson has shown that one of the most significant disease threats
to conservation is the emergence of "spill-over" pathogens
(pathogens that move from domestic animals to wildlife populations).
Here, the continued presence of domestic animals can maintain disease
transmission even when the endangered species is driven to extinction.
Furthermore, the role of spill-over and cointroduction of disease
with translocations of domestic and wild animals ("pathogen pollution"
-- Daszak 2000) implicates humans as the major
drivers of wildlife disease emergence.
But if these diseases
were emerging in parallel with the same environmental changes that
drive EIDs of humans, why the delay in labeling them emerging? Perhaps
the time lag between the human EID and wildlife EID movements reflects
natural anthropocentric concerns? Cunningham thinks this is short
sighted. "Consider the major emerging disease threats to humans:
AIDS, Hantavirus, Lyme disease, Influenza,
Ebola virus--they're all either zoonotic or have resulted from
pathogens switching hosts from wild animal reservoirs."
Domestic animals also
play a role here. The emergence of Nipah virus in pig farmers
and abattoir workers of Malaysia and Singapore in 1999 is just such
a case. The virus is thought to originate from fruitbat hosts that
infected pigs, where it is amplified in the respiratory tract and
transmitted to humans as an aerosol during coughing. Changes in Malaysian
pig farming practices may have driven this event, in the same way
that domestic pigs play a role in emergence of new strains of influenza
virus. This may be the rub with wildlife EIDs, that anthropogenic
environmental changes affecting wildlife disease ecology may increase
the threat of emerging zoonoses.
Funding
Gap
Despite this dual threat
to conservation and public health, wildlife diseases have in the past
fallen between the cracks between the funding agencies. Bob McLean,
director of the U.S. Geological Survey National Wildlife Health Center
(essentially the CDC equivalent for wildlife diseases), cites a "funding
gap between wildlife and human emerging diseases that needs to be
closed." In the past, the National Science Foundation has been
reluctant to support disease studies, NIH to support nonhuman disease
work, and other government agencies to deal with nondomestic animal
issues.
However, the massive interest
in the global crisis of amphibian declines may be changing the horizon
for wildlife disease funding. As part of the fallout from the discovery
of chytridiomycosis, James P. Collins of Arizona State
University, working with Berger, Hyatt, and a group of co-principal
investigators, was recently awarded a $2.9 million National Science
Foundation grant to study the host-pathogen biology of amphibian diseases
(NSF: Integrated Research Challenges in Environmental Biology). The
next step is to convince conservation biologists of the importance
of wildlife EIDs, which still receive short shrift in the planning
of captive breeding programs (Daszak 2000).
According to Dobson, "In
terms of population regulation, parasites are probably much more powerful
than predators, so assuming we can manage biodiversity and ignore
pathogens is simply naïve."
Peter
Daszak (Daszak@uga.edu) is a research scientist at the
Institute of Ecology and Department of Botany, University of Georgia,
working on amphibian chytridiomycosis and other emerging wildlife
diseases.
References
R.M.
Krause, "The restless tide: the persistent challenge of the microbial
world," Washington, D.C., National Foundation for Infectious
Diseases, 1981.
J.
Lederberg et al., "Emerging infections. microbial threats to
health in the United States," Institute of Medicine, Washington,
D.C., National Academy Press, 1992.
S.S.
Morse, Emerging Viruses, New York, Oxford University Press, 1993.
R.L.
Berkelman et al., "Infectious disease surveillance: a crumbling
foundation," Science, 264: 368-70, Apr. 15, 1994.
P.
Daszak et al., "Emerging infectious diseases of wildlife--threats
to biodiversity and human health," Science, 287, 443-9, Jan.
21, 2000.
L.
Berger et al., "Chytridiomycosis causes amphibian mortality associated
with population declines in the rain forests of Australia and Central
America," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 95:9031-6,
1998.