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Potential Use for Serosurveillance of Feral Swine to Map Risk for Anthrax Exposure,Texas, USA
Authors:Rachel M. Maison  Courtney F. Pierce  Izabela K. Ragan  Vienna R. Brown  Michael J. Bodenchuk  Richard A. Bowen  Angela M. Bosco-Lauth
Affiliation:Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA (R.M. Maison, I.K. Ragan, R.A. Bowen, A.M. Bosco-Lauth);US Department of Agriculture National Wildlife Research Center, Fort Collins (C.F. Pierce);US Department of Agriculture National Feral Swine Damage Management Program, Fort Collins (V.R. Brown);US Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, San Antonio, Texas, USA (M.J. Bodenchuk)
Abstract:
Anthrax is a disease of concern in many mammals, including humans. Management primarily consists of prevention through vaccination and tracking clinical-level observations because environmental isolation is laborious and bacterial distribution across large geographic areas difficult to confirm. Feral swine (Sus scrofa) are an invasive species with an extensive range in the southern United States that rarely succumbs to anthrax. We present evidence that feral swine might serve as biosentinels based on comparative seroprevalence in swine from historically defined anthrax-endemic and non–anthrax-endemic regions of Texas. Overall seropositivity was 43.7% (n = 478), and logistic regression revealed county endemicity status, age-class, sex, latitude, and longitude were informative for predicting antibody status. However, of these covariates, only latitude was statistically significant (β = –0.153, p = 0.047). These results suggests anthrax exposure in swine, when paired with continuous location data, could serve as a proxy for bacterial presence in specific areas.
Keywords:anthrax   Bacillus anthracis   bacteria   biosentinels   ELISA   endemic diseases   enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay   feral swine   invasive species   phylogeny   public health surveillance   risk assessment   serosurveillance   Sus scrofa   Texas   southern United States   zoonoses
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