Heterakis gallinarum and Histomonas meleagridis DNA persists in chicken houses years after depopulation.

2021 
Abstract The poultry pathogen Histomonas meleagridis is transmitted by chicken cecal worms (Heterakis gallinarum) and is potentially transmitted by second order insect vectors and paratenic hosts. Darkling beetles (Alphitobius diaperinus) are poultry farm pests that infest barns. An outstanding question is the degree to which darkling beetles transmit both Heterakis and Histomonas. In this study we monitored populations of darkling beetles and assessed their positivity for both Heterakis and Histomonas by PCR. Uniquely, this study was conducted during the scheduled deconstruction of Auburn University’s Poultry Research Farm. Therefore, we were able to monitor beetle and litter infection status months and years after bird depopulation. The duration of our monitoring continued through three seasons. We show that environmental DNA from both Heterakis and Histomonas persist in the environment long after prior infections, even in the absence of living Heterakis and its hosts. Finally, in an intensive search for live Heterakis, we discovered reniform nematodes (plant parasitic nematodes) residing in the soil floor of poultry farms.
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