Surveillance, monitoring and surveys of wildlife diseases: a public health and conservation approach

被引:33
|
作者
Guberti, Vittorio [1 ]
Stancampiano, Laura [2 ]
Ferrari, Nicola [3 ]
机构
[1] Ist Super Ric & Protez Ambientale, Ozzano Dell Emilia, BO, Italy
[2] Dipartimento Sci Med Vet, Ozzano Dell Emilia, BO, Italy
[3] Univ Milan, Dipartimento Sci Vet & Sanita Pubbl, Milan, Italy
来源
HYSTRIX-ITALIAN JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY | 2014年 / 25卷 / 01期
关键词
Wildlife diseases; surveillance; veterinary public health; conservation; parasites; DOGS LYCAON-PICTUS; INFECTIOUS-DISEASES; REEMERGING PATHOGENS; COMMUNITY SIZE; RABIES; HOST; EXTINCTION; DYNAMICS; MACROPARASITE; PERSISTENCE;
D O I
10.4404/hystrix-25.1-10114
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
During the past decades the interest in surveillance and monitoring of wildlife diseases has grown internationally. The main reasons could be the following: a) increased size of many wildlife populations that host pathogens affecting humans; b) the increased economic relevance of some wildlife disease; c) the role played by infections/diseases in the conservation of some wild endangered species. According to the above-described epidemiological situations there is an international need to develop appropriate strategies for the early detection, monitoring and surveys of infectious diseases in wildlife. The paper reviews the epidemiological assumptions on which disease surveillance, monitoring and surveys are, or should be, based. The main conclusions are: 1) wildlife disease surveillance and monitoring are long lasting activities that should be implemented when legal bases are available; 2) a wildlife disease introduced in a free area is more likely to be detected early using passive rather than active surveillance; 3) the definition of the "suspect case" largely affects the sensitivity of the whole passive surveillance; thus the suspected case definition should be modulated according to the level of risk; 4) in both active surveillance and monitoring, sampling plays an important role. The sensitivity of any active surveillance/monitoring system is highly dependent from the sampling unit that we define as: "the host target subpopulation, whose size can maintain the pathogen during a defined inter-sampling interval". Such definition merges the ecological, epidemiological and mathematical approaches aimed in controlling or eradicating infections in both livestock and wildlife; 5) When dealing with the conservation-disease interface, a standardized risk assessment procedure including risk mitigation has to become the rule,
引用
收藏
页码:3 / 8
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Surveillance and monitoring of wildlife diseases
    Mörner, T
    Obendorf, DL
    Artois, M
    Woodford, MH
    REVUE SCIENTIFIQUE ET TECHNIQUE-OFFICE INTERNATIONAL DES EPIZOOTIES, 2002, 21 (01): : 67 - 76
  • [2] Wildlife veterinarian, conservation and public health
    Lanfranchi, P
    Ferroglio, E
    Poglayen, G
    Guberti, V
    VETERINARY RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2003, 27 (Suppl 1) : 567 - 574
  • [3] Wildlife Veterinarian, Conservation and Public Health
    P. Lanfranchi
    E. Ferroglio
    G. Poglayen
    V. Guberti
    Veterinary Research Communications, 2003, 27 : 567 - 574
  • [4] Statistical approaches to the monitoring and surveillance of infectious diseases for veterinary public health
    Hoehle, Michael
    Paul, Michaela
    Held, Leonhard
    PREVENTIVE VETERINARY MEDICINE, 2009, 91 (01) : 2 - 10
  • [5] Surveillance of wildlife diseases in Belgium
    Linden, A.
    Wirtgen, M.
    Volpe, S.
    Nahayo, A.
    Pirson, J.
    Paternostre, J.
    Gregoire, F.
    EPIDEMIOLOGIE ET SANTE ANIMALE, NO 59-60, 2011, 59-60 : 213 - 215
  • [6] Editorial: Anthropogenic wildlife movements and infectious diseases: Health and conservation perspectives
    Gonzalez-Barrio, David
    Pruvot, Mathieu
    Kock, Richard Anthony
    Aguilar, Xavier Fernandez
    FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE, 2023, 10
  • [7] Health monitoring and conservation of wildlife in Sweden and Northern Europe
    Mörner, T
    DOMESTIC ANIMAL/WILDLIFE INTERFACE: ISSUE FOR DISEASE CONTROL, CONSERVATION, SUSTAINABLE FOOD PRODUCTION, AND EMERGING DISEASES, 2002, 969 : 34 - 38
  • [8] Implementing wildlife disease surveillance in the Netherlands, a One Health approach
    Maas, M.
    Grone, A.
    Kuiken, T.
    van Schaik, G.
    Roest, H. I. J.
    van der Giessen, J. W. B.
    REVUE SCIENTIFIQUE ET TECHNIQUE-OFFICE INTERNATIONAL DES EPIZOOTIES, 2016, 35 (03): : 863 - 874
  • [9] Evolving Urban Wildlife Health Surveillance to Intelligence for Pest Mitigation and Monitoring
    Stephen, Craig
    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2018, 6
  • [10] Surveillance for Emerging Biodiversity Diseases of Wildlife
    Grogan, Laura F.
    Berger, Lee
    Rose, Karrie
    Grillo, Victoria
    Cashins, Scott D.
    Skerratt, Lee F.
    PLOS PATHOGENS, 2014, 10 (05)