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Potential Occurrences of Foreign Animal Diseases in Wildlife

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A new disease or a new form of an old disease. Natural, accidental or intentional risks of ... Lameness (crawling on knees), ulcers, emaciation, but do recover ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Potential Occurrences of Foreign Animal Diseases in Wildlife


1
Potential Occurrences of Foreign Animal Diseases
in Wildlife
  • Angie Dement
  • Extension Associate for Veterinary Medicine
  • Texas AgriLife Extension Service
  • Texas AM System
  • College Station, TX 77843
  • http//aevm.tamu.edu

2
U.S. Threatened by Potential Occurrences of FEAD
  • Foreign Animal Diseases
  • Not currently present in U.S.
  • Accidental, intentional (bioterrorism) risks for
    entry
  • Emerging Animal Diseases
  • A new disease or a new form of an old disease
  • Natural, accidental or intentional risks of
    emergence
  • Commerce, mutation, environmental reasons

3
Types of Occurrences
  • Natural
  • Accidental
  • Intentional (Bioterrorist Act)

4
Devastating Effectsof Animal Diseases
  • Economic impacts
  • Sociologic impacts
  • Emotional impacts
  • Political impacts

5
First Line of Defense
  • Biosecurity
  • Livestock owners
  • Early detection and reporting

6
  • Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC)
  • 1-800-550-8242
  • 24 hours a day, 7 days a week

7
Foot and Mouth Disease
8
  • Highly contagious virus
  • Spreads rapidly
  • People not affected
  • Devastating
  • Emotionally
  • Economically
  • Sociologically
  • Politically

9
  • Susceptible domestic and wildcloven-hoofed
    livestock
  • Cattle
  • Sheep
  • Goats
  • Domestic and feral swine
  • Deer
  • Llamas

10
  • Transmission
  • Aerosol
  • wind
  • Mechanical
  • people, vehicles, animals
  • Biological
  • movement of infected animals
  • uncooked or undercooked meat products

11
  • If an outbreak occurs Big and Bad
  • Restrictions
  • Quarantines
  • Eradication (Depopulation)
  • Slaughter of animals
  • Proper disposal

12
  • FMD Outbreak in 2001 in Great Britain
  • Delayed response
  • 10,472 farms depopulated
  • 4 million destroyed to stop disease
  • 2.5 million humanely slaughtered
  • Over 13 billion

13
  • Increased risks for entry
  • Travelers
  • Meat products
  • Garbage
  • Bioterrorist

14
Mad Cow Disease
15
  • Not contagious
  • Reduced risks of entry and spread
  • USDA regulations
  • Feed bans
  • Slaughter bans
  • Import bans

16
Classical Swine Fever (Hog Cholera)
  • Also known as Hog Cholera
  • Affects swine and javelina
  • Reportable
  • Viral disease
  • Eradicated from the U.S. in 1978

17
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18
  • Routes of exit
  • Semen
  • Blood
  • Saliva
  • Feces
  • Meat
  • Routes of entry
  • Ingestion
  • Mucous membranes
  • Broken skin
  • In-utero

19
  • Acute form
  • Fever
  • Lethargic
  • Off feed
  • Purplish discoloration of skin
  • Ears
  • Legs
  • Abdomen
  • Death in 10-21 days
  • 100 mortality in piglets

20
  • Chronic form
  • Unpredictable appetite
  • Fever
  • Diarrhea for up to 1 month
  • Secondary pneumonia
  • May recover only to relapse and die
  • Recovery possible
  • 30-70 mortality

21
  • Prenatal form
  • Sows
  • Transient fever
  • Loss of appetite
  • Piglets
  • Persistently infected
  • 100 mortality
  • Death in 6-12 months
  • Mummified fetuses
  • Stillbirths

22
  • Fences to separate domestic and feral pigs
  • Properly cook waste food before feeding to pigs
  • Quarantine new pigs for at least 30 days
  • Maintain good biosecurity practices

23
Anthrax
  • Reportable
  • Bacterial disease
  • Worldwide distribution
  • Endemic to U.S.
  • triangle of Uvalde, Ozona, Eagle Pass, TX
  • Affects numerous animal species
  • Primarily domestic and wild livestock
  • Zoonotic

24
  • Bacterium - Bacillus anthracis
  • vegetative bacteria in animal
  • spore bacteria in environment

25
  • Vegetative bacteria leave dead animal via
    hemorrhagic exudates
  • mouth, nose, anus and vulva
  • contain large numbers of bacteria
  • Spores contaminate soil
  • spores remain viable for decades

26
  • Incubation period is 1-20 days
  • Infections apparent after 3-7 days

27
Diagnosis
  • Ruminants
  • Sudden death
  • Staggering
  • Trembling
  • Dyspnea
  • Fever
  • Respiratory distress
  • Convulsions
  • Abortions
  • Bloody discharge
  • FATAL

28
  • Pigs
  • Sudden death
  • Mild, chronic infections
  • Fever
  • Swelling
  • Enlarged lymph nodes
  • Usually recover

29
  • Dead animals
  • Sudden death blood poisoning
  • Rigor mortis absent
  • Rapid decomposition extreme bloat
  • Dark blood
  • Enlarged spleen
  • Non-clotting blood
  • People
  • Wound infections carbuncles

30
  • Burn carcass and bedding
  • Dont open carcass
  • spores will not develop without oxygen
  • bacteria will decompose within a few days
  • Vaccination of herd required
  • Quarantine of herd required for 10 daysafter
    vaccination

31
Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD)
  • Endemic
  • Viral
  • Reportable
  • Wide spread in white-tail deer
  • Not contagious
  • No vaccine

32
  • Incubation period 5-10 days
  • Viremic for 2 mos
  • Biological transmission
  • Biting midges
  • Some gnats
  • Some mosquitoes

33
  • 3 Forms
  • Peracute
  • Fever, anorexia, respiratory distress, swelling
    of tongue and conjunctiva, and die rapidly (8-36
    hours)
  • Acute
  • Extensive hemorrhages, salivation, nasal
    discharge, ulcers and high mortality
  • Chronic
  • Lameness (crawling on knees), ulcers, emaciation,
    but do recover

34
  • Cases found in late summer early autumn
  • Usually dies down with first good cold front

35
Biosecurity
  • For all diseases implement and maintain
    biosecurity practices

36
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37
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