Department of Infectious Diseases and Pathobiology, Vetsuisse Faculty, Institute for Fish and Wildlife Health, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Department of Infectious Diseases and Pathobiology, Vetsuisse Faculty, Institute of Animal Pathology (ITPA), University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2024 May 21;19(5):e0301438. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0301438. eCollection 2024.
In a One Health perspective general wildlife health surveillance (GWHS) gains importance worldwide, as pathogen transmission among wildlife, domestic animals and humans raises health, conservation and economic concerns. However, GWHS programs operate in the face of legal, geographical, financial, or administrative challenges. The present study uses a multi-tiered approach to understand the current characteristics, strengths and gaps of a European GWHS that operates in a fragmented legislative and multi-stakeholder environment. The aim is to support the implementation or improvement of other GWHS systems by managers, surveillance experts, and administrations. To assess the current state of wildlife health investigations and trends within the GWHS, we retrospectively analyzed 20 years of wildlife diagnostic data to explore alterations in annual case numbers, diagnosed diseases, and submitter types, conducted an online survey and phone interviews with official field partners (hunting administrators, game wardens and hunters) to assess their case submission criteria as well as their needs for post-mortem investigations, and performed in-house time estimations of post-mortem investigations to conduct a time-per-task analysis. Firstly, we found that infectious disease dynamics, the level of public awareness for specific diseases, research activities and increasing population sizes of in depth-monitored protected species, together with biogeographical and political boundaries all impacted case numbers and can present unexpected challenges to a GWHS. Secondly, we found that even a seemingly comprehensive GWHS can feature pronounced information gaps, with underrepresentation of common or easily recognizable diseases, blind spots in non-hunted species and only a fraction of discovered carcasses being submitted. Thirdly, we found that substantial amounts of wildlife health data may be available at local hunting administrations or disease specialist centers, but outside the reach of the GWHS and its processes. In conclusion, we recommend that fragmented and federalist GWHS programs like the one addressed require a central, consistent and accessible collection of wildlife health data. Also, considering the growing role of citizen observers in environmental research, we recommend using online reporting systems to harness decentrally available information and fill wildlife health information gaps.
从“同一健康”的角度来看,全球范围内越来越重视对野生动物的一般健康监测(GWHS),因为野生动物、家畜和人类之间的病原体传播引起了健康、保护和经济方面的关注。然而,GWHS 计划在法律、地理、财务或行政方面面临挑战。本研究采用多层次方法来了解在分散立法和多利益攸关方环境下运作的欧洲 GWHS 的当前特点、优势和差距。其目的是通过管理者、监测专家和行政部门来支持其他 GWHS 系统的实施或改进。为了评估 GWHS 中野生动物健康调查的当前状况和趋势,我们回顾性地分析了 20 年的野生动物诊断数据,以探讨年度病例数量、诊断疾病和提交者类型的变化,对官方实地合作伙伴(狩猎管理员、猎场看守人和猎人)进行了在线调查和电话访谈,以评估他们的病例提交标准以及对尸检调查的需求,并对内部进行了尸检调查时间估算,以进行任务时间分析。首先,我们发现传染病动态、特定疾病的公众意识水平、研究活动以及深入监测的保护物种的人口增长,再加上生物地理和政治边界,都对病例数量产生了影响,并且可能给 GWHS 带来意想不到的挑战。其次,我们发现,即使是看似全面的 GWHS 也可能存在明显的信息差距,常见或易于识别的疾病代表性不足,未被监测的物种存在盲点,而且只有发现的部分尸体被提交。第三,我们发现,大量野生动物健康数据可能存在于当地狩猎管理部门或疾病专家中心,但不在 GWHS 及其流程的范围内。总之,我们建议,像所涉及的那样分散和联邦制的 GWHS 计划需要一个集中、一致和可访问的野生动物健康数据收集。另外,考虑到公民观察员在环境研究中的作用不断增强,我们建议使用在线报告系统来利用分散的可用信息并填补野生动物健康信息差距。