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Potential Occurrences of Foreign Animal Diseases in Wildlife Angie Dement Extension Associate for Veterinary Medicine Texas AgriLife Extension Service Texas A&M System College Station, TX 77843 http://aevm.tamu.edu
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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
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Types of Occurrences Natural Accidental Intentional (Bioterrorist Act)
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Devastating Effects of Animal Diseases Economic impacts Sociologic impacts Emotional impacts Political impacts
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First Line of Defense Biosecurity Livestock owners Early detection and reporting
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Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC) 1-800-550-8242 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
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Foot and Mouth Disease
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Highly contagious virus Spreads rapidly People not affected Devastating Emotionally Economically Sociologically Politically
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Susceptible domestic and wild cloven-hoofed livestock Cattle Sheep Goats Domestic and feral swine Deer Llamas
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Transmission Aerosol wind Mechanical people, vehicles, animals Biological movement of infected animals uncooked or undercooked meat products
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If an outbreak occurs – “Big and Bad” Restrictions Quarantines Eradication (Depopulation) Slaughter of animals Proper disposal
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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
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Increased risks for entry Travelers Meat products Garbage Bioterrorist
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Mad Cow Disease
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Not contagious Reduced risks of entry and spread USDA regulations Feed bans Slaughter bans Import bans
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Classical Swine Fever (Hog Cholera) Also known as Hog Cholera Affects swine and javelina Reportable Viral disease Eradicated from the U.S. in 1978
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Routes of exit Semen Blood Saliva Feces Meat Routes of entry Ingestion Mucous membranes Broken skin In-utero
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Acute form Fever Lethargic Off feed Purplish discoloration of skin Ears Legs Abdomen Death in 10-21 days 100% mortality in piglets
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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
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Prenatal form Sows Transient fever Loss of appetite Piglets Persistently infected 100% mortality Death in 6-12 months Mummified fetuses Stillbirths
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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
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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
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Bacterium - Bacillus anthracis vegetative bacteria in animal spore bacteria in environment
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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
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Incubation period is 1-20 days Infections apparent after 3-7 days
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Diagnosis Ruminants: Sudden death Staggering Trembling Dyspnea Fever Respiratory distress Convulsions Abortions Bloody discharge FATAL
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Pigs: Sudden death Mild, chronic infections Fever Swelling Enlarged lymph nodes Usually recover
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Dead animals: Sudden death – blood poisoning Rigor mortis absent Rapid decomposition – extreme bloat Dark blood Enlarged spleen Non-clotting blood People: Wound infections – carbuncles
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Burn carcass and bedding Don’t 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 days after vaccination
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Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD) Endemic Viral Reportable Wide spread in white-tail deer Not contagious No vaccine
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Incubation period 5-10 days Viremic for 2 mos Biological transmission Biting midges Some gnats Some mosquitoes
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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
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Cases found in late summer early autumn Usually dies down with first good cold front
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Biosecurity For all diseases implement and maintain biosecurity practices
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Questions ?
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