Bovine tuberculosis (Mycobacterium bovis) in British farmland wildlife: the importance to agriculture

Bovine tuberculosis (bTB) is an important disease of cattle and an emerging infectious disease of humans. Cow- and badger-based control strategies have failed to eradicate bTB from the British cattle herd, and the incidence is rising by about 18% per year. The annual cost to taxpayers in Britain is...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2006-02, Vol.273 (1584), p.357-365
Hauptverfasser: Mathews, F, Macdonald, D.W, Taylor, G.M, Gelling, M, Norman, R.A, Honess, P.E, Foster, R, Gower, C.M, Varley, S, Harris, A
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container_end_page 365
container_issue 1584
container_start_page 357
container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences
container_volume 273
creator Mathews, F
Macdonald, D.W
Taylor, G.M
Gelling, M
Norman, R.A
Honess, P.E
Foster, R
Gower, C.M
Varley, S
Harris, A
description Bovine tuberculosis (bTB) is an important disease of cattle and an emerging infectious disease of humans. Cow- and badger-based control strategies have failed to eradicate bTB from the British cattle herd, and the incidence is rising by about 18% per year. The annual cost to taxpayers in Britain is currently £74 million. Research has focused on the badger as a potential bTB reservoir, with little attention being paid to other mammals common on farmland. We have conducted a systematic survey of wild mammals (n=4393 individuals) present on dairy farms to explore the role of species other than badgers in the epidemiology of bTB. Cultures were prepared from 10 397 samples (primarily faeces, urine and tracheal aspirates). One of the 1307 bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) live-sampled, and three of the 43 badgers (Meles meles), yielded positive isolates of Mycobacterium bovis. This is the first time the bacterium has been isolated from the bank vole. The strain type was the same as that found in cattle and badgers on the same farm. However, our work indicates that the mean prevalence of infectious individuals among common farmland wildlife is extremely low (the upper 95% confidence interval is ≤2.0 for all of the abundant species). Mathematical models illustrate that it is highly unlikely the disease could be maintained at such low levels. Our results suggest that these animals are relatively unimportant as reservoirs of bTB, having insufficient within-species (or within-group) transmission to sustain the infection, though occasional spill-overs from cattle or badgers may occur.
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Cow- and badger-based control strategies have failed to eradicate bTB from the British cattle herd, and the incidence is rising by about 18% per year. The annual cost to taxpayers in Britain is currently £74 million. Research has focused on the badger as a potential bTB reservoir, with little attention being paid to other mammals common on farmland. We have conducted a systematic survey of wild mammals (n=4393 individuals) present on dairy farms to explore the role of species other than badgers in the epidemiology of bTB. Cultures were prepared from 10 397 samples (primarily faeces, urine and tracheal aspirates). One of the 1307 bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) live-sampled, and three of the 43 badgers (Meles meles), yielded positive isolates of Mycobacterium bovis. This is the first time the bacterium has been isolated from the bank vole. The strain type was the same as that found in cattle and badgers on the same farm. 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However, our work indicates that the mean prevalence of infectious individuals among common farmland wildlife is extremely low (the upper 95% confidence interval is ≤2.0 for all of the abundant species). Mathematical models illustrate that it is highly unlikely the disease could be maintained at such low levels. Our results suggest that these animals are relatively unimportant as reservoirs of bTB, having insufficient within-species (or within-group) transmission to sustain the infection, though occasional spill-overs from cattle or badgers may occur.</abstract><cop>London</cop><pub>The Royal Society</pub><pmid>16543179</pmid><doi>10.1098/rspb.2005.3298</doi><tpages>9</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects agricultural land
animal pathogenic bacteria
Animal traps
Animals
Animals, Wild - microbiology
Badgers
Bovine Tuberculosis
Cattle
Clethrionomys glareolus
Cross-Sectional Studies
dairy farming
Disease Reservoirs - microbiology
Disease Reservoirs - veterinary
DNA, Bacterial - chemistry
DNA, Bacterial - genetics
Epidemiology
Genotype
Infections
Mammals
Meles meles
Models, Biological
Mycobacterium bovis
mycobacterium microti
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Mycobacterium tuberculosis - genetics
Mycobacterium tuberculosis - growth & development
PCR
Polymerase Chain Reaction - veterinary
Prevalence
Tuberculosis, Bovine - epidemiology
Tuberculosis, Bovine - microbiology
Ungulates
United Kingdom - epidemiology
Voles
wild animals
title Bovine tuberculosis (Mycobacterium bovis) in British farmland wildlife: the importance to agriculture
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