Certain vaccines prevent sickness and death, but don't block transmission--meaning they may actually give some viral strains an extra shot at survival. Christopher Intagliata reports.
ByIn the 1960s, was ravaging the . The virus caused what's called Marek's disease--and killed one to two percent of the birds. "Given that there are billions of birds in the industry, that's a lot of birds." Andrew Read, an evolutionary biologist at Penn State University. He says the virus was easy to catch. "The dander of chickens if full of the virus. If you shake a chicken, the virus drops out."
Now, Read and his colleagues have shown that these 'leaky' vaccines may actually give some viral strains an evolutionary leg up. Because the most virulent strains usually wipe out unvaccinated birds in just 10 days--not enough time for the birds to infect many others. These viruses are essentially so 'hot' they burn themselves out. But vaccinated birds infection with the hot virus, and shed it for weeks--allowing strains that would otherwise die out to stick around, and kill any unprotected birds. The study appears in the journal . [Andrew F. Read et al, ]
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