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Volume 25, Number 6—June 2019
Research

Mass Die-Off of Saiga Antelopes, Kazakhstan, 2015

Sasan Fereidouni, Graham L. Freimanis, Mukhit Orynbayev, Paolo Ribeca, John Flannery, Donald P. King, Steffen Zuther, Martin Beer, Dirk Höper, Aidyn Kydyrmanov, Kobey Karamendin, and Richard KockComments to Author 
Author affiliations: University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Vienna, Austria (S. Fereidouni); The Pirbright Institute, Pirbright, UK (G.L. Freimanis, P. Ribeca, J. Flannery, D.P. King); Research Institute for Biological Safety Problems, Otar, Kazakhstan (M. Orynbayev); Association for the Conservation of Biodiversity of Kazakhstan, Astana, Kazakhstan (S. Zuther); Frankfurt Zoological Society, Frankfurt, Germany (S. Zuther); Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany (M. Beer, D. Höper); Institute of Microbiology and Virology, Almaty, Kazakhstan (A. Kydrymanov, K. Karamendin); Royal Veterinary College, London, UK (R. Kock)

Main Article

Table 3

Main results of the k-mer–based approach on the random amplification metatranscriptomic dataset used in an investigation of a mass die-off of saiga antelopes, Kazakhstan, 2015*

Organism No. reads (% total reads)
Sample 1 Sample 2 Sample 3 Sample 4 Sample 5 Sample 6
Total no. reads 231,907 773,835 272,102 300,807 235,255 187,049
Total no. reads passing QC 109,302 (47.1) 553,163 (71.48) 174,613 (64.17) 233,888 (77.8) 171,409 (72.86) 138,292 (73.93)
Unclassified/nonmicrobial 50,478 (46.18) 343,404 (62.08) 86,165 (49.35) 133,456 (57.06) 57,812 (33.73) 50,731 (36.68)
Virus 47 (0.03) 141 (0.03) 33 (0.03) 174 (0.05) 73 (0.04) 51 (0.04)
Pasteurellaceae 53,097 (48.58) 129,337 (23.38) 69,251 (39.66) 63,817 (27.29) 93,378 (54.48) 72,799 (52.64)
Pasteurella multocida 49,844 (45.6) 115,231 (20.83) 60,504 (34.65) 56,775 (24.27) 86,664 (50.56) 67,406 (48.74)
Alteromondales 1303 (1.19) 2690 (0.49) 35 (0.02) 499 (0.21) 32 (0.02) 51 (0.04)
Enterobacteriaceae 52 (0.05) 208 (0.04) 153 (0.09) 112 (0.05) 77 (0.04) 48 (0.03)
Haemophilus 23 (0.02) 77 (0.01) 31 (0.02) 36 (0.02) 63 (0.04) 37 (0.03)
Betaproteobacteria 86 (0.08) 13160 (2.38) 30 (0.02) 86 (0.04) 18 (0.01) 22 (0.02)
Mannheimia 10 (0.0) 18 (0.0) 12 (0.01) 18 (0.01) 19 (0.01) 9 (0.01)
Aggregatibacter 8 (0.0) 37 (0.0) 13 (0.0) 18 (0.0) 16 (0.0) 18 (0.01)
Klebsiella 11 (0.0) 58 (0.01) 16 (0.0) 54 (0.01) 16 (0.0) 14 (0.0)

*Only organisms that were identified in all samples and with >10 reads are listed. Samples 2 and 5 were also tested at Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut by using an RNA sequencing protocol. QC, quality control.

Main Article

Page created: May 20, 2019
Page updated: May 20, 2019
Page reviewed: May 20, 2019
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