Simulating the spread of classical swine fever virus between a hypothetical wild-boar population and domestic pig herds in Denmark

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Simulating the spread of classical swine fever virus between a hypothetical wild-boar population and domestic pig herds in Denmark. / Boklund, A.; Goldbach, S. G.; Uttenthal, Å; Alban, L.

In: Preventive Veterinary Medicine, Vol. 85, No. 3-4, 15.07.2008, p. 187-206.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Boklund, A, Goldbach, SG, Uttenthal, Å & Alban, L 2008, 'Simulating the spread of classical swine fever virus between a hypothetical wild-boar population and domestic pig herds in Denmark', Preventive Veterinary Medicine, vol. 85, no. 3-4, pp. 187-206. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2008.01.012

APA

Boklund, A., Goldbach, S. G., Uttenthal, Å., & Alban, L. (2008). Simulating the spread of classical swine fever virus between a hypothetical wild-boar population and domestic pig herds in Denmark. Preventive Veterinary Medicine, 85(3-4), 187-206. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2008.01.012

Vancouver

Boklund A, Goldbach SG, Uttenthal Å, Alban L. Simulating the spread of classical swine fever virus between a hypothetical wild-boar population and domestic pig herds in Denmark. Preventive Veterinary Medicine. 2008 Jul 15;85(3-4):187-206. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2008.01.012

Author

Boklund, A. ; Goldbach, S. G. ; Uttenthal, Å ; Alban, L. / Simulating the spread of classical swine fever virus between a hypothetical wild-boar population and domestic pig herds in Denmark. In: Preventive Veterinary Medicine. 2008 ; Vol. 85, No. 3-4. pp. 187-206.

Bibtex

@article{f9b431949b3a484bad69a1d82b07e85e,
title = "Simulating the spread of classical swine fever virus between a hypothetical wild-boar population and domestic pig herds in Denmark",
abstract = "Denmark has no free-range wild-boar population. However, Danish wildlife organizations have suggested that wild boar should be reintroduced into the wild to broaden national biodiversity. Danish pig farmers fear that this would lead to a higher risk of introduction of classical swine fever virus (CSFV), which could have enormous consequences in terms of loss of pork exports. We conducted a risk assessment to address the additional risk of introducing and spreading CSFV due to the reintroduction of wild boar. In this paper, we present the part of the risk assessment that deals with the spread of CSFV between the hypothetical wild-boar population and the domestic population. Furthermore, the economic impact is assessed taking the perspective of the Danish national budget and the Danish pig industry. We used InterSpreadPlus to model the differential classical swine fever (CSF) risk due to wild boar. Nine scenarios were run to elucidate the effect of: (a) presence of wild boar (yes/no), (b) locations for the index case (domestic pig herd/wild-boar group), (c) type of control strategy for wild boar (hunting/vaccination) and (d) presence of free-range domestic pigs. The presence of free-range wild boar was simulated in two large forests using data from wildlife studies and Danish habitat data. For each scenario, we estimated (1) the control costs borne by the veterinary authorities, (2) the control-related costs to farmers and (3) the loss of exports associated with an epidemic. Our simulations predict that CSFV will be transmitted from the domestic pig population to wild boar if the infected domestic pig herd is located close to an area with wild boar (<5 km). If an outbreak begins in the wild-boar population, the epidemic will last longer and will occasionally lead to several epidemics because of periodic transfer of virus from groups of infected wild boar to domestic pig herds. The size and duration of the epidemic will be reduced if there are no free-range domestic pig herds in the area with CSF-infected wild boar. The economic calculations showed that the total national costs for Denmark (i.e. the direct costs to the national budget and the costs to the pig industry) related to an outbreak of CSF in Denmark will be highly driven by the reactions of the export markets and in particular of the non-EU markets. Unfortunately, there is a substantial amount of uncertainty surrounding this issue. If hunting is used as a control measure, the average expenses related to a CSF outbreak will be 40% higher if wild boar are present compared with not present. However, a vaccination strategy for wild boar will double the total costs compared with a hunting strategy.",
keywords = "Classical swine fever, CSFV, Denmark, Economics, InterSpreadPlus, Simulation, Wild boar",
author = "A. Boklund and Goldbach, {S. G.} and {\AA} Uttenthal and L. Alban",
year = "2008",
month = jul,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1016/j.prevetmed.2008.01.012",
language = "English",
volume = "85",
pages = "187--206",
journal = "Preventive Veterinary Medicine",
issn = "0167-5877",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "3-4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Simulating the spread of classical swine fever virus between a hypothetical wild-boar population and domestic pig herds in Denmark

AU - Boklund, A.

AU - Goldbach, S. G.

AU - Uttenthal, Å

AU - Alban, L.

PY - 2008/7/15

Y1 - 2008/7/15

N2 - Denmark has no free-range wild-boar population. However, Danish wildlife organizations have suggested that wild boar should be reintroduced into the wild to broaden national biodiversity. Danish pig farmers fear that this would lead to a higher risk of introduction of classical swine fever virus (CSFV), which could have enormous consequences in terms of loss of pork exports. We conducted a risk assessment to address the additional risk of introducing and spreading CSFV due to the reintroduction of wild boar. In this paper, we present the part of the risk assessment that deals with the spread of CSFV between the hypothetical wild-boar population and the domestic population. Furthermore, the economic impact is assessed taking the perspective of the Danish national budget and the Danish pig industry. We used InterSpreadPlus to model the differential classical swine fever (CSF) risk due to wild boar. Nine scenarios were run to elucidate the effect of: (a) presence of wild boar (yes/no), (b) locations for the index case (domestic pig herd/wild-boar group), (c) type of control strategy for wild boar (hunting/vaccination) and (d) presence of free-range domestic pigs. The presence of free-range wild boar was simulated in two large forests using data from wildlife studies and Danish habitat data. For each scenario, we estimated (1) the control costs borne by the veterinary authorities, (2) the control-related costs to farmers and (3) the loss of exports associated with an epidemic. Our simulations predict that CSFV will be transmitted from the domestic pig population to wild boar if the infected domestic pig herd is located close to an area with wild boar (<5 km). If an outbreak begins in the wild-boar population, the epidemic will last longer and will occasionally lead to several epidemics because of periodic transfer of virus from groups of infected wild boar to domestic pig herds. The size and duration of the epidemic will be reduced if there are no free-range domestic pig herds in the area with CSF-infected wild boar. The economic calculations showed that the total national costs for Denmark (i.e. the direct costs to the national budget and the costs to the pig industry) related to an outbreak of CSF in Denmark will be highly driven by the reactions of the export markets and in particular of the non-EU markets. Unfortunately, there is a substantial amount of uncertainty surrounding this issue. If hunting is used as a control measure, the average expenses related to a CSF outbreak will be 40% higher if wild boar are present compared with not present. However, a vaccination strategy for wild boar will double the total costs compared with a hunting strategy.

AB - Denmark has no free-range wild-boar population. However, Danish wildlife organizations have suggested that wild boar should be reintroduced into the wild to broaden national biodiversity. Danish pig farmers fear that this would lead to a higher risk of introduction of classical swine fever virus (CSFV), which could have enormous consequences in terms of loss of pork exports. We conducted a risk assessment to address the additional risk of introducing and spreading CSFV due to the reintroduction of wild boar. In this paper, we present the part of the risk assessment that deals with the spread of CSFV between the hypothetical wild-boar population and the domestic population. Furthermore, the economic impact is assessed taking the perspective of the Danish national budget and the Danish pig industry. We used InterSpreadPlus to model the differential classical swine fever (CSF) risk due to wild boar. Nine scenarios were run to elucidate the effect of: (a) presence of wild boar (yes/no), (b) locations for the index case (domestic pig herd/wild-boar group), (c) type of control strategy for wild boar (hunting/vaccination) and (d) presence of free-range domestic pigs. The presence of free-range wild boar was simulated in two large forests using data from wildlife studies and Danish habitat data. For each scenario, we estimated (1) the control costs borne by the veterinary authorities, (2) the control-related costs to farmers and (3) the loss of exports associated with an epidemic. Our simulations predict that CSFV will be transmitted from the domestic pig population to wild boar if the infected domestic pig herd is located close to an area with wild boar (<5 km). If an outbreak begins in the wild-boar population, the epidemic will last longer and will occasionally lead to several epidemics because of periodic transfer of virus from groups of infected wild boar to domestic pig herds. The size and duration of the epidemic will be reduced if there are no free-range domestic pig herds in the area with CSF-infected wild boar. The economic calculations showed that the total national costs for Denmark (i.e. the direct costs to the national budget and the costs to the pig industry) related to an outbreak of CSF in Denmark will be highly driven by the reactions of the export markets and in particular of the non-EU markets. Unfortunately, there is a substantial amount of uncertainty surrounding this issue. If hunting is used as a control measure, the average expenses related to a CSF outbreak will be 40% higher if wild boar are present compared with not present. However, a vaccination strategy for wild boar will double the total costs compared with a hunting strategy.

KW - Classical swine fever

KW - CSFV

KW - Denmark

KW - Economics

KW - InterSpreadPlus

KW - Simulation

KW - Wild boar

U2 - 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2008.01.012

DO - 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2008.01.012

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 18339438

AN - SCOPUS:44549088205

VL - 85

SP - 187

EP - 206

JO - Preventive Veterinary Medicine

JF - Preventive Veterinary Medicine

SN - 0167-5877

IS - 3-4

ER -

ID: 256322817