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African swine fever virus – the possible role of flies and other insects in virus transmission
2020
Fila Mateusz | Woźniakowski Grzegorz
African swine fever (ASF) is an acute viral haemorrhagic disease of pigs and wild boars. It presents a serious threat to pig production worldwide, and since 2007, ASF outbreaks have been recorded in the Caucasus, Eastern Europe, and the Baltic States. In 2014, the disease was detected in Poland. ASF is on the list of notifiable diseases of the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE). Due to the lack of an available vaccine and treatment, the countermeasures against the disease consist in early detection of the virus in the pig population and control of its spread through the elimination of herds affected by disease outbreaks. Knowledge of the potential vectors of the virus and its persistence in the environment is crucial to prevent further disease spread and to understand the new epidemiology for how it compares to the previous experience in Spain gathered in the 1970s and 1980s.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Evaluation of the stable fly (Stomoxys calcitrans) as a vector of enzotic bovine leukosis
1988
Weber, A.F. | Moon, R.D. | Sorensen, D.K. | Bates, D.W. | Meiske, J.C. | Brown, C.A. | Rohland, N.L. | Hooker, E.C. | Strand, W.O.
Experiments reported here were directed at 2 questions: (1) Can the stable fly (Stomoxys calcitrans) tansmit enzootic bovine leukosis? (2) Could early viremia augment the probability of transmission by this insect? In one vector experiment, calves and bovine leukemia virus (BLV)-infected cows were housed with and without stable flies. The calves were monitored serologically during a 3-month postexposure period, using the agar gel immunodiffusion test. All fly-infested and fly-free calves remained BLV-seronegative. For a second vector experiment, donor calves, newly injected with blood from BLV-infected cows with high virus expression, were tethered alternately between uninoculated, weaned BLV-seronegative calves. These groups were housed with or without flies in 2 replicate trials. The inoculated calves from the first replicate seroconvert at 16 and 23 days after inoculation; the inoculated calves from the second replicate seroconverted at 11, 16, 16, and 37 days after inoculation. All uninoculated calves remained BLV-seronegative. In a manual transmission experiment, 50 unfed stable flies were allowed to complete a meal on each of 3 BLV-seronegative calves after feeding on a BLV-seropositive cow with high (42%) virus expression. One control calf was injected with blood from the cow. Seroconversion occurred in the control calf and 1 calf on which flies were given access. A scanning electron microscopic study was made of the everted and closed mouth parts of the stable fly. Given the lymphocyte count in blood from the cow used in the manual vector transmission experiment, it was calculated that 3,950 mouth part volumes would be necessary to transmit BLV. This estimate and our negative transmission results indicated that the stable fly is not a BLV vector of consequence.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Attempts to transmit Anaplasma marginale with Hippobosca rufipes and Stomoxys calcitrans
1981
Potgieter, F.T. | Sutherland, B. | Biggs, H.C.
attempts to transmit Anaplasma marginale to cattle with field collections of Hippobosca rufipes were unsuccessful, 1 of 3 attempts to transmit organism with Stomoxys calcitrans was successful
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