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Don’t Drown in a Disease Reservoir
Growing wildlife populations
are making some diseases more difficult to
eradicate, increasing the chances of a spillover into the cattle population.
By Kristen Tribe
In close proximity, cattle and
wildlife can equal a wildfire of disease.
"There are lots of diseases that can be
passed between wildlife and livestock, but usually [animal] numbers and the
space between them eliminates any problems," says Dr. Burke Healey,
Oklahoma state veterinarian.
Artificially maintained wildlife populations
are thought to have contributed to the ongoing brucellosis infection in bison
and elk at Yellowstone National Park and the tuberculosis infection in
white-tailed deer in Michigan. Disease reservoirs, such as these, increase
chances of the infection spilling over into the cattle population and make
eradication more complicated.
"As we get closer to eradicating diseases,
interaction between wildlife and livestock is becoming more important,"
says Diana Whipple, acting research leader, Bacterial Diseases of Livestock
Research Unit, USDA, ARS, National Animal Disease Center, Ames, Iowa. "We
didn’t even know that tuberculosis was in white-tailed deer until this was
discovered in Michigan, so we’re still trying to understand the disease in
this species."
Michigan’s tuberculosis
Although the United States began tuberculosis
eradication in 1917, a Michigan deer killed in 1975 tested positive for TB.
Since the last known case of cattle TB in Michigan was in 1974, it was assumed
an isolated incident. Michigan was accredited free in 1979 and no one looked
into the matter any further.
Then in 1994 a deer from the same part of the
state, northeastern Michigan, tested positive for tuberculosis, and further
investigation revealed a widespread infection.
The outbreak was originally thought to cover
only a 600-square-mile region, but there are now 12 counties with TB in
white-tailed deer, which covers almost a quarter of the state. And since 1998,
17 infected cattle herds have been detected.
Due to feeding, the deer population was twice
the carrying capacity of the land. They’ve become a reservoir for the disease,
which makes it nearly impossible to eradicate it from domestic livestock.
Feeding deer had become a multi-million dollar
industry, and Healey says it was unlike anything he had seen in Oklahoma or
Texas.
"We feed deer down here, but we’re used
to seeing 55-gallon drum feeders," Healey says. "They would bring in a
semi-load of corn and just dump it in a pile. These deer have become more like
feedyard animals."
Whipple says aerial photos looked like a spider
web with the corn pile in the center and deer trails leading to it from all
directions. She actually heard of one hunting club that spent $40,000 in deer
feed.
Besides deer, TB has also been found in a
number of other animals including coyote, fox, black bear, opossum, raccoon and
now elk, which could also become a reservoir for the disease.
"The diseases wouldn’t be as severe of a
threat and possibly not a threat at all to livestock, if these populations weren’t
artificially maintained," Healey says. Feeding deer is now illegal in
Michigan and hunting has been increased. Testing of cattle and depopulating
herds is now taking place. Unfortunately, Healey says many of those dairies and
farms can’t be repopulated as long as TB is still infecting the wildlife
population.
Texas’ El Paso and Hudspeth Counties, along
with Michigan, were the only areas in the United States not free of tuberculosis
in November 2000. Ten dairies along the Rio Grande have suffered low levels of
TB infection for the past 15 years. Due to this on-going infection, Texas was
given a split-state status in order to declare the rest of the state disease
free.
But that status was threatened in September
when a beef cattle herd in South Texas was also found to be infected with TB. At
that time, neighboring herds had tested negative; all animals sold from the herd
were being tracked down and efforts were being made to determine the source of
infection. At that point, Texas hadn’t faced an infection of its wildlife
population.
Yellowstone’s brucellosis
Although cattle first infected the bison and
elk in Yellowstone with brucellosis, there are no infected cattle herds at this
time. Healey says the rate of infection is high enough in wildlife that there is
a threat of transmitting it back to them.
They have been testing cattle to ensure that it
doesn’t spill over, and a vaccination program has been developed for further
protection.
According to an article in Agricultural
Research, "RB51 was approved by the USDA as the official vaccine to
protect U.S. cattle against brucellosis . . . It replaced strain 19, a vaccine
that is essentially no longer used."
Whipple says scientists are studying its use in
bison and there’s a number of ongoing studies looking at its safety and
efficacy. They have discovered it does not work in elk.
But even if a vaccine is discovered that will
protect wildlife, there’s still the issue of how to administer it. One method
that is being explored is the biobullet, which would be like delivering a dart
with a vaccine in it. Whipple says they still need to find out how well it would
stimulate an immune response.
Healey says the real problem in Yellowstone is
jurisdiction because there are numerous state and federal agencies involved and
joint jurisdictions. He says it wouldn’t be that hard to clean up the disease,
if everyone could agree on the method.
After going through the court system, a Bison
Management Plan has been developed but there still isn’t a brucellosis
eradication plan.
As of January 2001, there were no cattle herds
under quarantine for brucellosis in Texas for the first time in the 50-year
battle against the disease. Texas, along with Florida and Missouri, is in the
final stages of eradication. Although Texas didn’t have any infected herds at
the first of the year, the Texas Animal Health Commission was actively testing
and trying to find any remaining herds still infected.
"We are so close to eradication,"
says Dr. Terry Conger, state epidemiologist, TAHC. "If we become complacent
now and leave even one infected herd out there, we could lose all this progress
– and compromise the sacrifices producers have made through the years."
Other diseases
Although these cases in Michigan and
Yellowstone make up the most widespread infections and greatest threat to
livestock, there are other diseases that flare up from time to time. Animal
health officials are also working diligently to learn more about emerging
diseases and to protect the U.S. livestock and wildlife populations from these
relatively "new" afflictions.
Anthrax is one of those culprits that’s
always around, and it’s transmissible between wildlife and livestock. Endemic
to Texas, spores are always present, just dormant, and an anthrax outbreak is
most likely after periods of wet, cool weather, followed by several weeks of hot
and dry conditions.
Some ranchers vaccinate for anthrax, if it’s
a recurring problem in their area. This past summer, South Texas ranchers
battled another bout of it. Wildlife can actually become a reservoir for the
disease, so it was important to not only burn carcasses of animals that died
from the disease, but also their bedding, manure and surrounding soil.
"If you see wildlife dying off or aborted
or dead fawns, No. 1, don’t touch them and No. 2, call your local vet or the
county agent. Depending on what they think it is, they may contact the Animal
Health Commission," says Dr. James Johnson, diplomate of American
Zoological Medicine, Texas A&M University.
Johnson says another disease of serious concern
is a disease of ruminants in the Caribbean called heartwater; it’s spread by
ticks.
"The species of the tick that transmits
this disease in Africa and the Caribbean is not present here, but we have the
genus," explains Johnson. "It's possible it could carry it as well,
but if the known tick that transmits this disease was infected and loose in the
country, it could be devastating."
Tortoises imported from South Africa, for the
reptile pet trade, had the tick on them, and even though the ticks weren’t
infected, their importation is now banned. This is just one of many precautions
that animal health officials have taken in this situation to help eliminate the
threat of this disease.
Healey says he feels like the government has
responded quickly to arising disease issues, and in turn, the United States has
avoided any related problems with international trade.
Obviously, BSE has caused trade problems for
the United Kingdom, and although the United States has not had any cases,
researchers are studying chronic wasting disease in an effort to determine how
prion diseases cross species.
CWD is endemic to a region from Fort Collins,
Colo., to Cheyenne, Wyo., to a corner of Nebraska at the North Platte Basin. It’s
found in deer and elk and not thought to be transmissible to cattle; but by
learning more about it, researchers hope their studies will help ensure the
United States remains BSE-free.
Healey says there have been trials done where
they’ve tried to infect cattle and haven’t been able to cause any chronic
wasting disease. In the wild, there is a 7 percent infection rate in elk herds,
but rate of infection is generally much higher in captive herds – 30 percent
or 40 percent. Again, a concentrated population on limited acreage is thought to
encourage such a high infection rate.
Human health
Many of these diseases are not only a threat to
animals, but are transmissible to humans, too. Tuberculosis and brucellosis
posed health problems in the early 1900s, but technology and modern medicine
have almost eliminated these diseases and others like them.
For example, many people got tuberculosis from
drinking raw milk from infected cows, but pasteurization has eliminated this
threat. Healey says foodborne illnesses are really more of a problem now than
these diseases.
"E. coli, campylobacter and
salmonellas, those are all going to be more likely for [producers] to get
because we may be working cattle and stop and eat a sandwich on the
tailgate," Healey explains. "This might be more of an issue to farmers
and ranchers than those people in town, but on the other hand, if you have a
higher exposure rate, you might have a higher immune system than someone that
hasn’t had exposure to E. coli."
Healey says we actually have a society of very
naive immune systems because we’ve developed such a safe food and water
supply.
"We’ve had the luxury of the safest food
supply in the world," says Healey. "As we’ve purified these systems,
we’ve set ourselves up to be more susceptible to these situations. You never
hear of E. coli down in Mexico, but take a look at their sanitation
systems."
Although these diseases don’t affect humans
as much as in the past, they are obviously thriving in some of the wildlife and
livestock populations. Healey says disease concerns have always been around, but
the difference is that today we have emerging diseases, such as BSE, that we
didn’t know about until about 15 years ago.
The bottom line is that producers need to be
aware of the condition of the wildlife in their area and report any sick or dead
animals that they find. While cattle are easily treated, wildlife magnify the
problem, making eradication nearly impossible.
"The main thing producers need to
realize," says Healey, "is that if they are artificially supporting a
group of wildlife then they need to begin to consider disease as a management
issue."
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