Fujian Journal of Agricultural Sciences ›› 2019, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (7): 796-801.doi: 10.19303/j.issn.1008-0384.2019.07.007

• Animal Science • Previous Articles     Next Articles

An Etiological Study on Muscovy Duck-Origin Goose Plague in Fujian

LIN Feng-qiang1,2, CHENG Xiao-xia1,2, ZHU Xiao-li1,2, CHEN Shao-ying1,2, JIANG Dan-dan1   

  1. 1. Institute of Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Medicine, Fujian Academy of Agriculture Sciences, Fuzhou, Fujian 350013, China;
    2. Fujian Animal Diseases Control Technology Development Center, Fuzhou, Fujian 350013, China
  • Received:2019-04-22 Revised:2019-06-25 Online:2019-07-20 Published:2019-10-14

Abstract: [Objective] Etiology of the epidemic Muscovy duck-origin goose plague (MDGP) and genetic variation of the pathogenic parvovirus (MDGPV) in Fujian were studied.[Method] Clinic specimens from 30 suspected MDGP cases at the major duck breeding areas in Fujian were collected for the etiological detection, pathogen isolation, virus infection test, and gene fragment sequence analysis.[Result] On the 30 cases, 15 were confirmed to be MDGPV-positive. All isolated 15 MDGPV could cause death to the Muscovy duck embryos. The morbidity and mortality on the ducks from the viral infection were 60%-100% and 40%-60%, respectively. The nucleotide homology of VP1 gene of the MDGPV isolates was greater than 99.5%. The homology of the isolates with MDGPV-PT was higher than 96% with no deletion and insertion on the nucleobases or gene recombination. On the other hand, its homology with MDPV-P was less than 90%. The phylogenetic tree analysis showed that the 15 isolates belonged to the same branch as MDGPV-PT but differed from MDPV-P.[Conclusion] The pathogenicity and gene sequence of the MDGPV strain prevalent in 2018 and those of the MDGPV-PT isolated in 1998 were similar with no apparent mutations. The biological and genomic characteristics of the MDGPV isolates seemed stable with little genetic variation throughout the years.

Key words: muscovy duck-origin goose plague, muscovy duck derived goose parvovirus, prevalent strain, pathogen

CLC Number: 

  • S855