Four New Viruses Discovered In Galapagos Tortoises After COVID-Style Tests

Scientists have discovered novel viruses in Galápagos giant tortoises similar to this one seen in a press release photo. (Juan Manuel García, Charles Darwin Foundation/Zenger)
Scientists have discovered novel viruses in Galápagos giant tortoises similar to this one seen in a press release photo. (Juan Manuel García, Charles Darwin Foundation/Zenger)


By Joseph Golder

Four viruses have been found for the first time in giant tortoises on the Galápagos Islands in Ecuador after 454 of the animals underwent COVID-style testing.

The infected animals live on islands where there is human activity. Tortoises on islands with no human activity did not test positive for any of the four viruses, researchers said.

The Charles Darwin Foundation, which led the study, said in a statement that the researchers determined that several species of giant tortoise living on different islands in the Galápagos were found to be carrying herpesviruses and adenoviruses, which are well-known for causing disease in turtles and tortoises around the world.

Tourists walk near giant tortoises in the highlands of Santa Cruz island on Jan. 18, 2019, in Galápagos Islands, Ecuador. In Santa Cruz, both adenovirus and herpesvirus were detected in the species more closely related to human activities, according to a recent study. In Española, an island not inhabited by humans, no viruses were detected. A growing human population and the influx of tourism on the Galápagos Islands have created challenges in conserving the UNESCO World Heritage Site and its endemic wildlife. (Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images for Lumix)

The test results were “verified in a process that is similar to the COVID test we humans have become increasingly familiar with, but for tortoises, we collect a swab sample from the eyes, mouth and the cloaca,” which is an opening under the tail that empties the bladder, digestive system and reproductive system.

The researchers had tested for “up to four infectious disease-causing agents that threaten turtles and tortoises around the world (herpesvirus, adenovirus, mycoplasma and ranavirus); two of these (adenovirus and herpesvirus) were deemed positive in Galápagos tortoises.”

An international team of scientists from the Charles Darwin Foundation in the Galápagos Islands worked with other experts at the Saint Louis Zoo Institute for Conservation Medicine in Missouri, the Research Center for Animal Health in Madrid, the Complutense University, also in the Spanish capital, the European University of Madrid and technicians from the Galápagos National Park Directorate.

“Infectious diseases have been reported as causes of mortality in turtles and tortoises globally, but previous to our study, there was no information about the infectious diseases that may affect giant tortoises in Galapagos,” said Ainoa Nieto Claudin, lead author of the study published in the journal Transboundary and Emerging Diseases.

The foundation said it did not detect the viruses in all the tortoises tested. On Española Island, which “is not inhabited by humans, no viruses were detected, whereas in Santa Cruz both adenovirus and herpesvirus were detected in the species more closely related to human activities,” the foundation said.

“Giant tortoises act as sentinels of ecosystem health, and the discovery of four viruses highlights the need for in-depth studies of infectious agents in the Galapagos wildlife,” Nieto Claudin, a wildlife veterinarian, said.

A sea lion sits on a boardwalk on San Cristobal island on Jan. 15, 2019, in the Galápagos Islands, Ecuador. Much of the Ecuadorian province is protected, but a booming tourism industry has meant the wildlife is exposed to a growing human presence. (Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images for Lumix)

A previous study conducted by the same group of scientists had described how human activity in the Galápagos Islands was “driving the transmission of antibiotic resistance in giant tortoises.”

This is indicative of the importance of conducting health assessments of endemic wildlife species to detect novel and emerging diseases “that may threaten animal and human health alike,” said study co-author Sharon Deem, the director of the Saint Louis Zoo Institute for Conservation Medicine.

She said the discovery of the four viruses was not necessarily a negative thing, adding that it was possible that these viruses have been evolving in the tortoises “for hundreds of years.”

“Endemic pathogens that have evolved with a particular species do not usually cause harm or diseases to those species unless the virus jumps to another species or if the animal harboring the virus suffers from other stressors that may compromise their immune system,” Deem said.

Future studies will be partly geared toward assessing whether these viruses play a role in the survival and fitness abilities of the tortoises, the foundation said.

Edited by Richard Pretorius and Kristen Butler

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