Multidecadal High Mortality Disease Events in Australian Domestic Geese Associated with a Novel Alphaherpesvirus, Designated Anatid Alphaherpevirus 2
Mirrim Kelly-Bosma, Selina Ossedryver, Rachel Olive Bowater, Jeff Butler, Tristan Reid, Willy W. Suen, Darren Underwood, Shaylie Latimore, Leonard Izzard, Ancy Joseph, Patrick Mileto, Vittoria Stevens, Jianning Wang, Tessa Mackie, Alexandr Mastakov, Robert Doneley

TL;DR
A new herpesvirus, AnHV-2, is linked to deadly outbreaks in Australian domestic geese, with genome sequencing revealing its distinct evolutionary position.
Contribution
Discovery and genomic characterization of a novel alphaherpesvirus, AnHV-2, and a related virus AnHV-3, in domestic geese.
Findings
AnHV-2 causes rapid-onset, high-mortality disease in domestic geese with severe internal lesions.
AnHV-2 and AnHV-3 form a distinct clade in the Mardivirus genus, showing 76.1% nucleotide identity.
A real-time PCR test was developed for rapid detection of AnHV-2 to aid surveillance and outbreak management.
Abstract
Herpesviruses are ubiquitous viruses which infect a wide range of hosts. Novel herpesviruses are being increasingly detected in free-ranging bird populations and there are growing concerns for cross-species infection and spillover events. Herein, multiple sporadic outbreaks of mortality caused by a herpesvirus are described in domestic geese in Queensland, Australia. Goose herpesvirus was initially detected in 1989 in south-east Queensland, and this article details four further recent outbreaks and reports novel genome sequencing and phylogeny of the preliminarily designated anatid alphaherpesvirus 2 (AnHV-2). Affected flocks were housed outdoors and comingled with other domesticated and wild anseriforms and other birds which were unaffected by disease. Affected geese displayed anorexia, lethargy, weakness, vomiting, and diarrhoea prior to death within 12–24 hr of the onset of clinical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHerpesvirus Infections and Treatments · Animal Virus Infections Studies · Toxoplasma gondii Research Studies
