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A Review of Environmental Risk Factors for African Swine Fever in European Wild Boar

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani11092692

Keywords

African swine fever; risk factor; wild boar; epidemiology; disease control; surveillance; environment

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [773701]
  2. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [773701] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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African swine fever (ASF) is a viral disease that affects pigs and has severe economic impacts. The disease is mainly spread through wild boar in Europe and poses a threat to domestic pig holdings. Environmental factors like climate, land cover, human activity, and wild boar behavior play crucial roles in the occurrence of ASF in wild boar populations.
Simple Summary African swine fever (ASF) is a viral haemorrhagic pig disease that continues to spread in Europe and severely damages pig production and economy, disrupts trade with pigs and porcine products and even has an impact on social welfare in affected areas. Wild boar and domestic pigs are both susceptible to infection with the ASF virus, which causes generalised haemorrhagic illness, fever and rapid death of most infected animals within a few days. ASF occurrence in wild boar dominates the spread and persistence of this disease in Europe and poses an imminent threat for spill-over infections with ASFV in domestic pig holdings. Wild boar represent an intelligent and adaptable wildlife host for ASF with an expansive distribution range in Europe and complex biology. Wild boar thus intricately link ASF with their habitat, making ASF inherently complicated and resource-hungry to control in the environment. This work reviews the currently known environmental risk factors for ASF in wild boar and specifically assesses the role that climate, land cover, human activity, wild boar and disease distribution play in the occurrence of ASF in wild boar. The reviewed risk information guides the implementation of ASF control measures in wild boar. A detailed understanding of environmental risk factors for African swine fever (ASF) in wild boar will be not only essential for risk assessments but also for timely and spatially informed allocation of resources in order to manage wild boar-targeted ASF control measures efficiently. Here, we review currently known environmental risk factors that can influence the occurrence of ASF virus infection in wild boar when compared to disease occurrence in wild boar of a non-exposed reference scenario. Accordingly, the exposure of wild boar to environmental risk factors related to (1) climate, (2) land cover, (3) human activity, (4) wild boar and (5) ASF were evaluated. As key environmental risk factors in this review, increased ASF occurrence in wild boar was associated with seasonal patterns, forest coverage, presence of water, human presence, farming activities, wild boar density and ASF nearness. The review highlights inconsistencies in some of these risk factor associations with disease detection in space and time and may provide valuable insights for the investigation of ASF transmission dynamics. The examined risk information was applied to consider potential improvements of the ASF control strategy in wild boar regarding disease surveillance, hunting, wild boar carcass searches and ASF barrier implementation.

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