Global synthesis reveals bird traits that promote Lyme and flags high-risk species
Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
Birds play an underrecognized role in spreading tickborne disease due to their capacity for long-distance travel and tendency to split their time in different parts of the world -- patterns that are shifting due to climate change.
Knowing
which bird species are able to infect ticks with pathogens can help scientists
predict where tickborne diseases might emerge and pose a health risk to people.
A new study published in the journal Global Ecology and Biogeography used machine learning to identify bird species with the potential to transmit the Lyme disease bacterium (Borrelia burgdorferi) to feeding ticks.
The team developed a model that identified birds
known to spread Lyme disease with 80% accuracy and flagged 21 new species that
should be prioritized for surveillance.
Lead author Daniel Becker, a Postdoctoral Fellow at Indiana University, says, "We know birds can infect ticks with the Lyme bacterium; however, until now, no one has systematically studied the ecological and evolutionary drivers that influence which bird species are most likely to host and spread Borrelia burgdorferi on a global scale. We set out to fill this gap by identifying traits of bird species that are most likely to pass Lyme to feeding ticks."
Senior author
Barbara Han, a disease ecologist at Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, says,
"To predict and monitor species that could spread tickborne diseases to
people, we first need to know which traits make certain animals good pathogen
hosts. Here, we used machine learning to assess bird species traits, paired
with Lyme infection data from ticks found on birds, to predict bird species
that have the potential to spread Lyme."
In this study, the team searched published literature to locate studies reporting Lyme infection of ticks found feeding on birds. The global search yielded 102 studies, including data from ticks found on 183 bird species; of these, 91 carried ticks that tested positive for Borrelia burgdorferi.
These bird species
are considered 'competent' reservoir species because they are known to infect
feeding ticks with Borrelia burgdorferi. Species flagged have a broad range,
reaching across the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Oceania.
Next, machine
learning was used to compare traits of competent bird species with 4691 other
bird species. Data included information on life history features like diet
composition, foraging location, body size, lifespan, reproductive rate, and
fledgling age, as well as geographical information like migration distance,
global dispersal, and maximum elevation. They also looked at baseline
corticosterone -- the stress hormone in birds -- which can influence
susceptibility to infection.
The model identified birds that were known to spread Lyme to ticks with 80% accuracy, and revealed 21 new species that should be prioritized for surveillance based on sharing traits with known competent species.
High-risk species tend to have low
baseline corticosterone, breed and winter at high latitudes and low elevations,
are broadly distributed, and occur on either extreme of the pace-of-life
continuum (species that breed early and die young, or breed late and are longer
lived).
Species from the genus Turdus, commonly known as true thrushes, were found to have a significantly greater likelihood of competence compared to other taxa. This finding suggests that thrushes might be the riskiest bird species for Lyme transmission.
Passerines, or perching birds, also tended to have higher
competence, as did birds that primarily eat seeds and those that forage on the
ground -- a behavior that would put them in reach of questing ticks.
Identifying Lyme-competent bird species could have direct implications for our health. Tickborne diseases, especially Lyme disease, can be difficult to diagnose.
Knowing
where ticks and the diseases they carry are spreading can help medical
practitioners prepare for diagnosis and treatment, improving health outcomes
for patients.
Due to climate change, the breeding ranges of many birds are shifting north. As birds spread into higher latitudes, so do ticks and pathogens. Some bird species have taken up full or part-time residence in cities and suburbs.
Birds that can succeed in
developed environments, especially those that are overwintering in these new
places in close proximity to people, increase residents' risk of contracting a
tickborne disease.
Becker says,
"Birds don't spread Lyme directly to people, but they can carry infected
ticks to new locations with no history of Lyme occurrence. A tick could drop
off a bird and into a garden or yard, where it could later bite and infect a
person. If local medical practitioners are unfamiliar with Lyme symptoms,
proper diagnosis could be delayed. Identifying where ticks are spreading could
improve medical response to Lyme and other tickborne diseases."
Han concludes,
"These findings remind us that pathogen competence varies tremendously,
even among animals of the same family. Machine learning techniques allow us to
analyze animal traits and help us predict risky species on a global scale --
not only for Lyme, but for other tickborne and zoonotic diseases that involve
multiple host species. These predictions could provide crucial information to
guide early interventions, prevent disease spillover, and protect our health."