Domesticated Australian and Timor zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata castanotis and Taeniopygia guttata guttata, respectively) were inoculated with canary (Serinus canaria) blood containing a Hawaiian isolate of Plasmodium relictum (lineage GRW04), a hemoparasite that causes avian malaria. In two experimental trials, TZFs but not AZFs developed parasitemia that was detected by microscopic examination of blood smears. In the second trial, in which molecular detection methods were used, a single AZF and five of six challenged TZFs were positive for the parasite. Additionally, P. relictum DNA was detected in multiple blood samples obtained from TZFs over the 28 days following challenge. TZFs may provide a useful, easily maintained, laboratory model for the study of Plasmodium interactions in passerines but are still inferior to canaries, the traditionally used model of avian malaria infection, in terms of supporting high-parasitemia infections.
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10 September 2018
Population Differences in Susceptibility to Plasmodium relictum in Zebra Finches Taeniopygia guttata
Erik K. Hofmeister,
Christopher N. Balakrishnan,
Carter T. Atkinson
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Avian Diseases
Vol. 62 • No. 4
December 2018
Vol. 62 • No. 4
December 2018
Australian zebra finch
avian malaria
domestic canary
experimental model
Plasmodium relictum
Timor zebra finch