Croft Simon, Massei Giovanna, Smith Graham C, Fouracre David, Aegerter James N
National Wildlife Management Centre, Animal and Plant Health Agency, York, United Kingdom.
Front Vet Sci. 2020 Apr 8;7:154. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2020.00154. eCollection 2020.
African swine fever (ASF) is a highly contagious disease affecting all suids including wild boar. As the disease can damage commercial pig production and its circulation can threaten international trade, understanding the risks produced by free-living wild boar (as a wildlife reservoir) is important to ensure proportionate policies to exclude the disease, as well as an effective contingency response. The recent spread of the virus into Western Europe has produced concerns in many stakeholders including pig producers and national governments. Unlike in mainland Europe, where wild boar are widespread, in Britain, free-living populations have only recently re-established, and whilst these are still relatively small and isolated, they may provide a sufficient reservoir capable of sustaining disease and may thus present a continual source of infection risk to domestic pigs. This study focuses on one component of the risk produced by wild boar, specifically the distribution and persistence of virus in a landscape produced by the natural circulation of disease within wild boar. We used a spatial individual-based model run across a representation of a real landscape to explore the epidemiological consequences of an introduction of ASF into the Forest of Dean, currently hosting the largest population of wild boar in England. We explore various scenarios including variations in the prophylactic management of boar, as well as variations in reactive management (contingency response) following the detection of disease to evaluate their value in reducing this specific risk (presence of ASF virus of wild boar origin in the landscape). The abundance and distribution of wild boar is predicted to increase across our study extent over the next 20 years. Outbreaks of ASF are not predicted to be self-sustaining, with the median time to disease "burn-out" (no new infections) being 14 weeks. Carcass removal, as a tool in a package of reactive management, was of limited value in reducing the duration of outbreaks in this study. We suggest that useful predictions of some of the risks produced by ASF might be possible using only the distribution of the boar, rather than more difficult abundance or density measures.
非洲猪瘟(ASF)是一种极具传染性的疾病,可感染包括野猪在内的所有猪科动物。由于该疾病会损害商业养猪业,其传播还会威胁国际贸易,因此了解自由放养的野猪(作为野生动物宿主)所产生的风险,对于确保制定适当的政策以排除该疾病以及制定有效的应急响应措施至关重要。最近该病毒在西欧的传播引起了包括养猪户和各国政府在内的许多利益相关者的关注。与野猪广泛分布的欧洲大陆不同,在英国,自由放养的野猪种群直到最近才重新建立,虽然这些种群规模仍然相对较小且较为孤立,但它们可能提供一个足以维持疾病传播的宿主,从而可能对家猪构成持续的感染风险源。本研究聚焦于野猪所产生风险的一个组成部分,具体而言是病毒在野猪疾病自然传播所形成的景观中的分布和持久性。我们使用了一个基于个体的空间模型,该模型在真实景观的表示上运行,以探究将非洲猪瘟引入迪恩森林(目前是英格兰野猪数量最多的地区)后的流行病学后果。我们探讨了各种情景,包括野猪预防性管理的变化,以及疾病检测后反应性管理(应急响应)的变化,以评估它们在降低这种特定风险(景观中存在源自野猪的非洲猪瘟病毒)方面的价值。预计在未来20年里,我们研究范围内野猪的数量和分布将会增加。预计非洲猪瘟疫情不会自我持续,疾病“消退”(无新感染)的中位时间为14周。在本研究中,作为反应性管理措施之一的尸体清除,在缩短疫情持续时间方面价值有限。我们建议,仅使用野猪的分布情况,而非更难获取的数量或密度测量值,就有可能对非洲猪瘟产生的一些风险做出有用的预测。