Bovine Tuberculosis (bTB) roadmap:
Control Strategies
Roadmap for development of disease control strategies for bTB
Download bTB-Control-Strategies-Roadmap7
Host demographics
Next steps
Host demographics - including wildlife hosts
Research Question
What are we trying to achieve and why? What is the problem we are trying to solve?
- Obtaining accurate animal-level cattle location, test and movement and farming practice data.
- Obtaining accurate wildlife population data, population density, disease prevalence etc. over time and at appropriate scales.
- Farm size and size of susceptible wildlife populations will affect pathogen transmission.
Research Gaps and Challenges
What are the scientific and technological challenges (knowledge gaps needing to be addressed)?
- Cattle data tend to be exceptionally well recorded and can be integrated.
- Wildlife population and disease prevalence data are notoriously difficult to estimate over time.
Solution Routes
What approaches could/should be taken to address the research question?
- Establishing the structure of the livestock industry and contact network.
- Consider wildlife roadkill disease surveillance at broad geographic scales and targeted surveillance in hotspots.
- Wildlife population dynamics.
- Establish the carrying capacity of an area for a particular wildlife species that acts as a reservoir.
Dependencies
What else needs to be done before we can solve this need?
- Establish cattle identification, registration, and movement database; integrate active and passive TB surveillance.
- Establish periodic wildlife population estimation and ongoing TB surveillance via, for example, roadkill surveillance.
State Of the Art
Existing knowledge including successes and failures
Projects
What activities are planned or underway?
Inferring bovine tuberculosis transmission between cattle and badgers via the environment and risk mapping.
Planned Completion date 22/09/2023
Participating Country(s):
Netherlands
Development of lateral flow assays to detect host proteins in cattle for improved diagnosis of bovine tuberculosis.
Planned Completion date 15/08/2023
Participating Country(s):
Netherlands