Drivers of exposure to West Nile virus by American robins (Turdus migratorius) in the Midwest
Data files
Mar 27, 2026 version files 32.69 KB
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AMRO_WNV_final_data_merge_Dryad.xlsx
30.87 KB
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README.md
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Abstract
Complex interactions between animal migration and infection are increasingly recognized as important for shaping when and where wildlife are infectious. Bird migration could facilitate spatial spread of zoonotic pathogens but remains poorly understood, in part owing to limited seasonal sampling. Using serology for IgY antibodies, we evaluated seasonal exposure to West Nile virus (WNV) of American robins (Turdus migratorius) sampled monthly during 2021 and 2022 in Indiana and compared our seroprevalence results to those of robins from previous studies across North America using meta-analysis. Because robins overwintering in Indiana include local breeders and those breeding further north, we next evaluated how the probability of WNV exposure varied by breeding latitude. We also tagged robins breeding in Indiana with tracking devices to evaluate whether exposure to WNV is related to movement distance. We found that robins in Indiana are exposed to WNV more frequently than in previous studies elsewhere in North America and in earlier years, but we found no effects of season, sex, or breeding latitude. However, robins with higher fat scores were more likely to be seropositive, which may indicate these birds are more likely to survive infection. Our tracking data indicated that robins breeding in Indiana migrate several hundred miles to overwinter in the southeastern US and that WNV seropositivity had no association with movement distance. The mean durations of spring and fall migration were 13 and 19 days, respectively, nearly the same as or moderately above the maximum WNV infectious period in robins. Although these results suggest American robins have the capacity to move WNV long distances in spring, further studies are needed across the range of this host species to uncover its role in dispersing WNV.
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.j6q573nn9
Banding data, feather stable isotope data, and serology data.
Description of the data and file structure
Codes within the AMRO_WNV_final_data_merge_Dryad.xlsx file are as follows:
- Band: band number of the robin
- Species: AMRO refers to American Robin
- Age: AHY (after hatch year) or a robin in at least its second calendar year of life
- Sex: F (female), M (male), U (unknown)
- Wing: unflattened wing chord in mm
- Tail: tail length in mm
- Mass: body mass in grams
- Year: calendar year in which robin was sampled
- Loc.: location of capture in Bloomington, IN
GPS tag: ID of GPS tag deployed on robin - feather: feather collected from robin (Y), feather not collected from robin (N)
- Month: month of year in which robin was sampled
- d2H_f: Hydrogen isotopic composition of the feather
- Lat_median_GSP: Median estimated latitude from the 10% threshold map, based on Growing Season Precipitation
- Lat_sd_GSP: Standard deviation of estimated latitudes from the 10% threshold map, based on Growing Season Precipitation
- Lat_max_GSP: Maximum estimated latitude from the 10% threshold map, based on Growing Season Precipitation
- Lat_min_GSP: Minimum estimated latitude from the 10% threshold map, based on Growing Season Precipitation
- matrix: Which feather was sampled; S1 (first secondary flight feather)
- WNV: whether robin is seropositive (1) or seronegative (0)
- date: Calendar date robin was sampled (MM/DD/YY)
- jday: Julian date in which robin was sampled
- week: Week of the year in which robin was sampled
- fat: Subcutaneous fat score, estimated on a 7-point scale, with 0 being no fat and 6 being most fat
We samples American robins in Bloomington, Indiana; assessed their exposure to WNV using serology; and compared WNV seroprevalence estimates to others from the literature in American robins using meta-analysis.
