Paratuberculosis in farmed and free-living wild ruminants in the Czech Republic (1999–2001)
Due to the occurrence of the infection of Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis among domestic ruminants and the rapid development of farmed deer industry and the market of cloven-hoofed game we have carried surveys of paratuberculosis, beginning in 1997, in the most common four species of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Veterinary microbiology 2004-08, Vol.101 (4), p.225-234 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Due to the occurrence of the infection of
Mycobacterium avium subspecies
paratuberculosis among domestic ruminants and the rapid development of farmed deer industry and the market of cloven-hoofed game we have carried surveys of paratuberculosis, beginning in 1997, in the most common four species of wild ruminants in the Czech Republic [Pavlik et al., Vet. Microbiol. 77 (2000) 231–251]. From 1999 the prevalence of paratuberculosis has been slightly reduced in all three types of husbandry of wild ruminants. Nevertheless paratuberculosis has been diagnosed in wild ruminants in three districts, in four game parks and in five farms.
M. a. paratuberculosis was isolated from 128 (5.3%) out of 2, 403 wild ruminants of four animal species: 106 red deer, 2 roe deer, 4 fallow deer and 16 mouflons. In red deer farms, the highest number of clinical paratuberculosis cases was in yearling deer. RFLP type B-C1 of
M. a. paratuberculosis predominated during the second period (1999–2001) in all types of husbandry with no relationship to wild ruminant species. New “cattle” RFLP types B-C5 and B-C16 of
M. a. paratuberculosis were described in infected farmed red deer and one “intermediate” RFLP type R-I4 in fallow deer from one game park. The survival of
M. a. paratuberculosis was found to be 4 months during winter in the pasture after destocking of all cattle infected with paratuberculosis. We found that non-vertebrates, wild ruminants or non-ruminant wildlife can be vectors and potentially become a risk factor in the spread of
M. a. paratuberculosis infection. |
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ISSN: | 0378-1135 1873-2542 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.vetmic.2004.04.001 |