Literature detail

Cross-species transmission potential between wild pigs, livestock, poultry, wildlife, and humans: implications for disease risk management in North America.

Ryan S Miller1 Steven J Sweeney2 Chris Slootmaker3 Daniel A Grear4 Paul A Di Salvo2 Deborah Kiser2 Stephanie A Shwiff3
Affiliations 4 institutions
  1. Center for Epidemiology and Animal Health, Veterinary Services, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States. [email protected].
  2. Center for Epidemiology and Animal Health, Veterinary Services, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States.
  3. National Wildlife Research Center, Wildlife Services, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States.
  4. National Wildlife Health Center, United States Geological Survey, Madison, Wisconsin, United States.
PMID 28798293 2017 Sci Rep eng epublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Cross-species disease transmission between wildlife, domestic animals and humans is an increasing threat to public and veterinary health. Wild pigs are increasingly a potential veterinary and public health threat. Here we investigate 84 pathogens and the host species most at risk for transmission with wild pigs using a network approach. We assess the risk to agricultural and human health by evaluating the status of these pathogens and the co-occurrence of wild pigs, agriculture and humans. We identified 34 (87%) OIE listed swine pathogens that cause clinical disease in livestock, poultry, wildlife, and humans. On average 73% of bacterial, 39% of viral, and 63% of parasitic pathogens caused clinical disease in other species. Non-porcine livestock in the family Bovidae shared the most pathogens with swine (82%). Only 49% of currently listed OIE domestic swine diseases had published wild pig surveillance studies. The co-occurrence of wild pigs and farms increased annually at a rate of 1.2% with as much as 57% of all farms and 77% of all agricultural animals co-occurring with wild pigs. The increasing co-occurrence of wild pigs with livestock and humans along with the large number of pathogens shared is a growing risk for cross-species transmission.

Animals Animals, Domestic Animals, Wild Communicable Diseases, Emerging Humans Livestock North America Poultry Public Health Risk Management Sus scrofa Swine Swine Diseases Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

2 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Wild pigs and non-porcine livestock in the family Bovidae share numerous pathogens, suggesting animal-to-animal cross-species transmission potential between these species.

Virus
Not specified
Location
Supporting text

Non-porcine livestock in the family Bovidae shared the most pathogens with swine (82%). The increasing co-occurrence of wild pigs with livestock ... is a growing risk for cross-species transmission.

Study design
network analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-animal
Geographic raw
North America
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.85
Key finding

Published surveillance studies covered fewer than half of OIE-listed swine diseases in wild pigs, indicating incomplete zoonotic surveillance for this host in North America.

Virus
Not specified
Host
Location
Supporting text

Only 49% of currently listed OIE domestic swine diseases had published wild pig surveillance studies.

Geographic raw
North America