Tuberculosis in badgers where the bovine tuberculosis epidemic is expanding in cattle in England.
Authors
Swift, Benjamin Michael Connor
Barron, Elsa Sandoval
Christley, Rob
Corbetta, Davide
Grau-Roma, Llorenç
Jewell, Chris
O'Cathail, Colman
Mitchell, Andy
Phoenix, Jess
Prosser, Alison
Rees, Catherine
Sorley, Marion
Verin, Ranieri
Bennett, Malcolm
Publication Date
2021-10-25Journal Title
Sci Rep
ISSN
2045-2322
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
11
Issue
1
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Swift, B. M. C., Barron, E. S., Christley, R., Corbetta, D., Grau-Roma, L., Jewell, C., O'Cathail, C., et al. (2021). Tuberculosis in badgers where the bovine tuberculosis epidemic is expanding in cattle in England.. Sci Rep, 11 (1) https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-00473-6
Abstract
Bovine tuberculosis (bTB) is an important animal health and economic problem for the cattle industry and a potential zoonotic threat. Wild badgers (Meles meles) play a role on its epidemiology in some areas of high prevalence in cattle, particularly in the UK and Republic of Ireland and increasingly in parts of mainland Europe. However, little is known about the involvement of badgers in areas on the spatial edge of the cattle epidemic, where increasing prevalence in cattle is seen. Here we report the findings of a study of found-dead (mainly road-killed) badgers in six counties on the edge of the English epidemic of bTB in cattle. The overall prevalence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTC) infection detected in the study area was 51/610 (8.3%, 95% CI 6.4-11%) with the county-level prevalence ranging from 15 to 4-5%. The MTC spoligotypes of recovered from badgers and cattle varied: in the northern part of the study area spoligotype SB0129 predominated in both cattle and badgers, but elsewhere there was a much wider range of spoligotypes found in badgers than in cattle, in which infection was mostly with the regional cattle spoligotype. The low prevalence of MTC in badgers in much of the study area, and, relative to in cattle, the lower density of sampling, make firm conclusions difficult to draw. However, with the exception of Cheshire (north-west of the study area), little evidence was found to link the expansion of the bTB epidemic in cattle in England to widespread badger infection.
Keywords
Article, /631/326, /692/699/255/1856, article
Sponsorship
Research England (CCF-17-7779)
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, UK Government (SE3054 / OJEU 28406)
Identifiers
s41598-021-00473-6, 473
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-00473-6
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/329854
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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