Landcare Research - Manaaki Whenua, Lincoln, New Zealand.
Epidemiol Infect. 2012 Jun;140(6):1036-47. doi: 10.1017/S0950268811001579. Epub 2011 Aug 18.
In New Zealand, bovine tuberculosis (bTB) is present in domestic cattle and deer herds primarily as the result of on-going disease transmission from the primary wildlife host, the brushtail possum (Trichosurus vulpecula). However, bTB is also present in other introduced free-ranging mammalian species. Between 1996 and 2007, we conducted a series of studies to determine whether poison control of possum populations would have any effect on the prevalence of Mycobacterium bovis infection in sympatric feral pigs (Sus scrofa). We compared trends in the prevalence of bTB infection in feral pigs in six study areas: possum numbers were reduced in three areas, but not in the other three, effectively providing a thrice-replicated before-after-control-intervention design. Before possum control, the overall prevalence of culture-confirmed M. bovis infection in feral pigs was 16.7-94.4%, depending on area. Infection prevalence varied little between genders but did vary with age, increasing during the first 2-3 years of life but then declining in older pigs. In the areas in which possum control was applied, M. bovis prevalence in feral pigs fell to near zero within 2-3 years, provided control was applied successfully at the whole-landscape scale. In contrast, prevalence changed much less or not at all in the areas with no possum control. We conclude that feral pigs in New Zealand acquire M. bovis infection mainly by inter-species transmission from possums, but then rarely pass the disease on to other pigs and are end hosts. This is in contrast to the purported role of pigs as bTB maintenance hosts in other countries, and we suggest the difference in host status may reflect differences in the relative importance of the oral route of infection in different environments. Despite harbouring M. bovis infection for a number of years, pigs in New Zealand do not sustain bTB independently, but are good sentinels for disease prevalence in possum populations.
在新西兰,牛型结核(bTB)主要存在于家养牛和鹿群中,这是由于主要野生动物宿主帚尾袋貂(Trichosurus vulpecula)持续传播疾病的结果。然而,bTB 也存在于其他引入的自由放养的哺乳动物物种中。1996 年至 2007 年,我们进行了一系列研究,以确定对帚尾袋貂种群进行毒药控制是否会对共生的野猪(Sus scrofa)中牛型分枝杆菌感染的流行率产生任何影响。我们比较了六个研究区域中野猪 bTB 感染流行率的趋势:在三个区域减少了帚尾袋貂的数量,但在其他三个区域没有,这实际上提供了三倍重复的前后对照干预设计。在进行帚尾袋貂控制之前,根据地区的不同,野猪中经培养证实的牛型分枝杆菌感染的总体流行率为 16.7-94.4%。感染流行率在性别之间差异不大,但因年龄而异,在生命的头 2-3 年增加,但在老年猪中下降。在实施帚尾袋貂控制的区域,只要在整个景观范围内成功实施控制,野猪中牛型分枝杆菌的流行率将在 2-3 年内降至接近零。相比之下,在没有帚尾袋貂控制的区域,流行率变化很小或根本没有变化。我们的结论是,新西兰野猪主要通过与帚尾袋貂的物种间传播获得牛型分枝杆菌感染,但随后很少将疾病传播给其他猪并成为终末宿主。这与其他国家认为猪是 bTB 维持宿主的作用形成对比,我们认为宿主地位的差异可能反映了不同环境中感染的口腔途径的相对重要性的差异。尽管野猪携带牛型分枝杆菌感染多年,但它们在新西兰不能独立维持 bTB,而是帚尾袋貂种群中疾病流行率的良好哨兵。