Abstract
Background: The persistence of bovine TB (bTB) in various countries throughout the world is enhanced by the
existence of wildlife hosts for the infection. In Britain and Ireland, the principal wildlife host for bTB is the badger
(Meles meles). The objective of our study was to examine the dynamics of bTB in badgers in relation to both
badger-derived infection from within the population and externally-derived, trickle-type, infection, such as could
occur from other species or environmental sources, using a spatial stochastic simulation model.
Results: The presence of external sources of infection can increase mean prevalence and reduce the threshold
group size for disease persistence. Above the threshold equilibrium group size of 6–8 individuals predicted by the
model for bTB persistence in badgers based on internal infection alone, external sources of infection have relatively
little impact on the persistence or level of disease. However, within a critical range of group sizes just below this
threshold level, external infection becomes much more important in determining disease dynamics. Within this
critical range, external infection increases the ratio of intra- to inter-group infections due to the greater probability
of external infections entering fully-susceptible groups. The effect is to enable bTB persistence and increase bTB
prevalence in badger populations which would not be able to maintain bTB based on internal infection alone.
Conclusions: External sources of bTB infection can contribute to the persistence of bTB in badger populations. In
high-density badger populations, internal badger-derived infections occur at a sufficient rate that the additional
effect of external sources in exacerbating disease is minimal. However, in lower-density populations, external
sources of infection are much more important in enhancing bTB prevalence and persistence. In such circumstances,
it is particularly important that control strategies to reduce bTB in badgers include efforts to minimise such external
sources of infection.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 8 - 0 |
Number of pages | 7 |
Journal | BMC Veterinary Research |
Volume | 8 |
Publication status | First published - 2012 |
Bibliographical note
10232681024933
1023364
Keywords
- Cattle
- Disease
- Host community
- Model
- Perturbation
- Threshold