Assessing the Role of Long- Lived Reptiles in the Ecology of EEEV * * *

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Assessing the Role of Long- Lived Reptiles in the Ecology of EEEV * * * Bill Irby Bagie George, Derek McCoy, Hugh Moye, Kelly Dabney Department of Biology Georgia Southern University

Mosquito vectors Isolates from the following: Ae. vexans, An. crucians, An. punctipennis, An. quadrimaculatus, Cs. melanura, Cs. minnesotae, Cs. morsitans, Cq. perturbans, Cx. erraticus, Cx. nigripalpus, Cx. peccator, Cx. pipiens, Cx. quinquefasciatus, Cx. restuans, Cx. salinarius, Cx. territans, Cq. perturbans, Oc. atlanticus-tormentor, Oc. canadensis, Oc. cantator, Oc. infirmatus, Oc. mitchellae, Oc. sollicitans, Oc. triseriatus, Uranotaenia sapphirina

Where does EEEV go?

Where does EEEV go?

Role of Reptiles and Amphibians in EEEV Ecology? Found to be naturally infected with EEEV (Karstad, 1960) Susceptible to experimental infection (Hayes, 1964) Maintained high viremia over several months Experimentally carry the virus through hibernation

Bridge vectors bird mammal Coquilletidia perturbans Aedes sollicitans Mosquitoes that feed on reptiles Aedes atlanticus turtlefeeding and mammalophilic spp. Aedes canadensis turtlefeeding and mammalophilic spp. Aedes triseriatus turtle-feeding and mammalophilic spp. Culex erraticus feeds on any terrestrial vertebrate Culex peccator - herpetophilic Culex territans - herpetophilic Culiseta melanura feeds mostly on birds, ornithophilic

Culex erraticus female

Culex erraticus in the South Abundantly in Coastal Plain areas throughout southeastern US EEEV isolated from Culex erraticus in VA, SC, GA, AL and FL Culex erraticus feeding patterns: Exhibits unusual opportunism Suggests role as bridge vector in EEEV ecology Reptiles to birds? Birds to mammals?

Table 1: Hosts of Culex erraticus in North Carolina. Location Blood Meals Mammals Birds Amphibians/ Identified Reptiles Kenansville, NC 13 5 (38%) 4 (31%) 4 (31%) Raleigh, NC 225 111 (49%) 69 (31%) 45 (20%) Mammal blood meal sources included deer (16), dog (5), raccoon (3), cow (2), rodents (2), cat (1), and opossum (1). Amphibian blood meal sources included frog (3), and toad (1). Reptile blood meal sources included snake (16), turtle (2), and lizard (1).

Culex erraticus collections: 1990s CDC light traps and aspirators in 12 counties in Southeastern Georgia Vacuum aspiration from beneath bridges at 5 sites in Bulloch Co. and 3 sites in Effingham Co. Vacuum aspiration from gopher tortoise burrows and resting boxes at G.L. Smith State Park, Emanuel Co.

ATLANTA GEORGIA Sampling Locations ( ) AUGUSTA Richmond Co. MACON Washington Co. Burke Co. Screven Co. Emanuel Co. Effingham Co. Laurens Co. Bulloch Co. Toombs Co. SAVANNAH Wheeler Co. Tattnall Co. Bryan Co. 0 20 40 60 80 Miles

Table 2: Light trap collections in southeastern Georgia, 1997-1998. Location N Total Collected No. (%) Culex erraticus Most Abundant Rank of Species Culex erraticus Mosquito Survey, Flood Recovery Program, Georgia Division of Public Health (August-September, 1997) Bryan Co. 4 249 5 (2) Ae. atlanticus T5 of 10 Bulloch Co. 4 417 4 (1) Ae. vexans 9 of 15 Burke Co. 4 243 3 (1) Ae. vexans 4 of 12 Effingham Co. 4 289 81 (28) Cx. erraticus 1 of 13 Emanuel Co. 4 121 1 (1) Cx. nigripalpus T8 of 10 Laurens Co. 4 736 182 (25) Cx. erraticus 1 of 11 Richmond Co. 4 43 18 (42) Cx. erraticus 1 of 7 Screven Co. 4 229 16 (7) Ae. vexans 4 of 13 Tattnall Co. 4 66 4 (6) Cx. nigripalpus T5 of 13 Toombs Co. 4 92 2 (2) Cx. nigripalpus T4 of 9 Washington Co. 4 123 47 (38) Cx. erraticus 1 of 11 Wheeler Co. 4 69 27 (39) Cx. erraticus 1 of 10 Overall 48 2677 390 (15) Cx. erraticus 1 of 21 Georgia Southern University Campus, Bulloch Co. (April-December 1998): Herty Preserve 92 1008 5 (0.5) An. crucians T12 of 23 Raptor Center 63 618 15 (2) Ae. vexans 9 of 18

Table 3: Collectio ns of resting mosq uitoe s in south easte rn Georgia, 1996-1998. Location N Total Collected No. (%) Cx. erraticus Most Abundant Rank of Species Cx. erraticus Mo squito Survey, Flood Re cove ry Program, Georgia D iv ision of Publ ic Health (Augu st-septem ber, 1997 from bene at h bridges or in culv erts within 5 km of ligh t trap s ites): Bryan Co. 4 23 2 (10) Ae. atlanticus 3 of 3 Bulloch C o. 4 41 28 (68) Cx. erraticus 1 of 3 Burke Co. 4 84 1 (1) Ps. ferox T5 of 9 Effingham Co. 5 119 28 (24) Cx. quinquefasciatus 2 of 4 Em anue l Co. 10 23 8 (35) Cx. erraticus 1 of 7 Lau rens Co. 4 128 37 (29) An. quadrimaculatus 2 of 6 Richmon d Co. 4 3 1 (33) Cx. erraticus T1 o f 3 Scre ven C o. 4 40 1 (2) An. quadrimaculatus T4 of 6 Tat tnall Co. 4 24 18 (75) Cx. erraticus 1 of 5 Toombs Co. 4 10 5 (50) Cx. erraticus 1 of 4 Was hin gton Co. 8 44 25 (57) Cx. erraticus 1 of 10 Wheeler Co. 4 21 15 (71) Cx. erraticus 1 of 3 Ove rall 59 560 169 (30) Cx. erraticus 1 of 14 George L. Smith State Park, go ph er tortoise burrows, Emanuel Co. (Augu st 1995-July 1996, April-June 1998): ~900 223 160 (72) Cx. erraticus 1 of 7 Undersides of bridges in Bulloch and Effingham C o., (June 1996-April 1998): ~380 8630 4928 (57) Cx. erraticus 1 of 16

Mosquitoes collected from beneath bridges in Bulloch Co., GA, 1995-1998. Mosquito species Totals (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) Bloodfed Unfed Gravid Culex 2673 (68.4) 166 (6.2) 1793 (61.7) 714 (26.7) erraticus Anopheles 1091 (27.9) 160 (14.7) 802 (73.5) 129 (11.8) quadrimaculatus Others 142 (4.5)

Table 1: Hosts of Culex erraticus in North Carolina and Georgia. Location Blood Meals Mammals Birds Amphibians/ Identified Reptiles Kenansville, NC 13 5 (38%) 4 (31%) 4 (31%) Raleigh, NC 225 111 (49%) 69 (31%) 45 (20%) Bulloch & 119 29 (24%) 66 (56%) 24 (20%) Emanuel Co., GA Mammal blood meal sources included deer (16), dog (5), raccoon (3), cow (2), rodents (2), cat (1), and opossum (1). Amphibian blood meal sources included frog (3), and toad (1). Reptile blood meal sources included snake (16), turtle (2), and lizard (1).

Nulliparous ovary: tracheolar skeins Parous ovary Could virus be overwintering in adult Culex erraticus? - Parity of 250 adult females collected in October-December determined - All nulliparous Overwintering population is inseminated females who have never taken a blood meal!

Could a long lived reptile: - Serve as an over-wintering host for EEEV? - Serve as a long term maintenance (5-7 years) host for EEEV? And: - Does Culex erraticus act as a bridge vector from this population?

The gopher tortoise, Gopherus polyphemus

Gopher tortoise (and mosquito) habitat at G.L. Smith State Park, Emanuel Co., Georgia The burrows are just full of mosquitoes! -GSU Herpetologist

Burrows of the gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus) are prominent landscape features in sand hill habitats

Mosqui toes As sociate d wi th Bu rrows of th e Gop her Torto ise at G.L. Smith State Park, Eman ue l Co., GA 1995-1996 1999-2000 Mosqui to Species No. (%) No. (%) Tota ls (%) A nopheles crucians 30 (15) 25 (6) 55 (9) An. punctipennis 1 (<1) 0 1 (<1) An. quadrimaculatus 8 (4) 5 (1) 13 (2) Culex erraticus 160 (78) 367 (90) 527 (86) Cx. n igripalpus 0 3 (<1) 3 (<1) Cx. quinquefasciatus 3 (1) 3 (<1) 6 (1) Cx. salinarius 2 (1) 0 2 (<1) Uranotaenia sapphirina 2 (1) 0 2 (<1) Male mo squi toes 17 88 105 Tota l 223 496 719

Fungus gnats (Diptera: Mycetophilidae) from gopher tortoise burrows Exechiopsis sp. Rymosia sp.

Hosts of Culex erraticus at G.L. Smith State Park, Emanuel Co., GA (McCoy, 2000) Host No. (%) of Bloodmeals Mouse 29 (37) Squirrel 12 (15) Deer 1 (1) Bird 3 (4) Toad 4 (5) Turtle 17 (22) Lizard 12 (15)

Culex erraticus in Southeastern Georgia Most abundant mosquito collected in 12 county study on mosquito diversity and distribution Most abundant mosquito collected in artificial resting shelters (bridges) Most abundant mosquito associated with burrows of the gopher tortoise Unusually opportunistic feeding behavior Abundance and feeding behavior (and virus detection) suggest important role in EEEV ecology Further studies indicated

Gopher tortoises, parasite load & EEEV at Ft. Stewart, GA 2000-2002

Objectives Measure the seropositivity of gopher tortoises for EEEV in areas where EEEV is endemic Determine the presence of blood-borne parasites Measure ectoparasite load Measure the intestinal parasitic load of fecal samples obtained Determine the potential correlation between parasite load and seropositivity

Materials and Methods Gopher tortoise sampling (bucket trapping) at Fort Stewart Blood sampling for: Antibodies to EEEV Protein LA Indirect ELISA Blood-borne parasites Thin smears with Wright-Giemsa stain Tick load Intestinal parasite load Quantitative fecal floats (eggs/gram of feces)

Protein LA assay for EEEV Indirect ELISA with AP-conjugated protein LA Negative controls: - normal mouse brain + tortoise test serum - EEEV (mouse brain) antigen + control tortoise sera* (captive bred tortoises) - normal mouse brain + anti-eeev mouse ascites fluid - no antigen + mouse ascites fluid (Mab) Positive control - EEEV (mouse brain) antigen + mouse ascites fluid Test sera: tortoise serum samples at serial 2 fold dilutions starting at 1:100

Blank Indirect ELISA with alkaline phosphatase-conjugated Protein LA NMB + TS (1:100) MBA + TS (1:100) MBA + TS (1:200) MBA + TS (1:400) MBA + TS (1:800) MBA + TS (1:1600) MBA + TS (1:3200) MBA + CT (1:100) MBA + MAF (1:500) NMB + MAF (1:500)

Blood smear (10X) Blood smear (40X)

Tick Load 100 tortoises with 1972 ticks (Amblyomma tuberculatum) 253 male ticks (244 unfed, 9 fed): 2.53/tortoise 69 female ticks (52 unfed, 17 fed): 0.69/tortoise 1650 nymphs (967 unfed, 683 fed): 16.5/tortoise

Infested tortoises Gopher tortoise ticks 2002 80 60 40 20 0 low (1-27) moderate (28-55) Level of infestation high (56-83) The number of gopher tortoises (Gopherus polyphemus) from Fort Stewart Army Reservation infested with the gopher tortoise tick (Amblyomma tuberculatum) during the 2002 trapping season.

Intestinal Parasite Load Nematode eggs: 93.6-156 m in length and 52-93.6 m in width Found in all tortoises! Trichostrongylidae Undescribed: Trichoskrjabinia n. sp.? One road-kill tortoise posted: Adult nematodes found

Nematode eggs (10X) Nematode egg (40X)

head (with alae) esophageal bulb testes male nematode bursa

head head esophageal bulb ovaries ovaries Eggs in utero female nematode genital pore bursa

mass (kg) 6.5 6 B B 5.5 B 5 4.5 4 Average eggs/turtle: 36.33 B B B B B B B B B B B B B Average eggs/turtle: 44 3.5 3 B B 2.5 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 length (cm) Regression of mass to straight carapace length of gopher tortoises (Gopherus polyphemus) from Fort Stewart Army Reservation in 2002. Healthier turtles have fewer nematode eggs (intestinal parasites).

Summary of data collected for viral exposure and parasite infestation of the gopher tortoise. Number of samples Range Prevalence Tortoise plasma (EEEV) 152 (2001:50, 2002:102) n/a 0% Intestinal parasite load (nematode eggs) 55 (2001:22, 2002:33) 1-230 (2001:2-137, 2002:1-230) 100% Blood-borne parasite load 101 n/a 0% Tick load 119 1-80 84.03%

Georgia s State Reptile is not implicated in EEEV ecology! But another candidate is identified: Cupp, E.W., Zhang, D., Yue, X., Cupp, M.S., Guyer, C., Korves,T., Unnasch, T.R., 2005. Identification of reptilian and amphibian blood meals from mosquitoes in an eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus focus in central Alabama. Am J Trop Med Hyg 71: 272 276. Culex erraticus, Culex peccator, and Uranotaenia sapphirina positive for EEEV in study in Tuskegee National Forest Blood meal IDs show Water Moccasin (Agkistrodon piscivorus) is commonly fed on by these mosquitoes, and only common denominator Is this long-lived snake an over-wintering reservoir for EEEV? - mosquito collecting and snake hunting conducted at EEE positive sites in Southeast Georgia during 2010-2011

Water moccasins are well camouflaged!

Sampling to date, 2010-11: - EEE sites in Bulloch, Screven, Jenkins, Emanuel, Candler, Evans, Long, Bryan, Effingham, Tattnall and Chatham Counties - Over 50 aspirator samples taken from different bridges - Over 400 hours hunting for snakes no other trapping method - Snakes are hard to find when you re looking for them! - Snakes encountered/collected: - 3 water moccasins - 2 brown water snakes - 3 banded water snakes - 2 red-bellied water snakes - 1 eastern king snake - 4 black racers - 1 yellow rat snake

Jacob Gregory & James Fercilien, sampling near Swainsboro, 2010

Sampling sites in Bulloch & Jenkins County

Blood samples are taken from the caudal vein of an intubated snake A red-bellied water snake in Jenkins County

About to capture our only water moccasin

Kelly Dabney and Cam Hayes sampling on the Canoochee, Summer 2011

Representative aspirator collections (% of total collected) near EEE sites in Southeastern Georgia during 2010 by county of collection Species Bulloch Chatham Effingham Emanuel Long Tattnall Wayne Cx. erraticus 62 66 76 20 58 20 75 An. quadrimaculatus 37 12 20 25 40 18 An. barberi <1 5 Ps. ferox <1 33 Cx. pilosus 10 8 2 An. crucians 4 8 2 Cx. territans 10 Ps. columbiae 40 Cs. melanura 5 Ur. sapphirina 8 Cq. perturbans 3 Total collected 272 3 25 20 12 5 60 - Culex erraticus is the only species common to all sites - Mosquitoes are scarce during a drought!

A study in progress: - Sampling will continue this year and next. - Blood-fed Cx. erraticus will have blood meals identified using sequencing of amplicons of the mitochondrial cyt b gene. - Assay for antibodies to EEEV will be developed using a captive-bred water moccasin for negative control sera. - Any help locating snakes would be appreciated!