Vaccination strategies for managing brucellosis in Yellowstone bison
Authored by John J Treanor, Joseph S Johnson, Rick L Wallen, Sara Cilles, Philip H Crowley, John J Cox, David S Maehr, P J White, Glenn E Plumb
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.03.055
Sponsors:
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Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
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Abstract
Concerns over migratory bison (Bison bison) at Yellowstone National Park
transmitting brucellosis (Brucella abortus) to cattle herds on adjacent
lands led to proposals for bison vaccination. We developed an
individual-based model to evaluate how brucellosis infection might
respond under alternate vaccination strategies, including: (1)
vaccination of female calves and yearlings captured at the park boundary
when bison move outside the primary conservation area; (2) combining
boundary vaccination with the remote delivery of vaccine to female
calves and yearlings distributed throughout the park; and (3)
vaccinating all female bison (including adults) during boundary capture
and throughout the park using remote delivery of vaccine. Simulations
suggested Alternative 3 would be most effective, with brucellosis
seroprevalence decreasing by 66\% (from 0.47 to 0.16) over a 30-year
period resulting from 29\% of the population receiving protection
through vaccination. Under this alternative, bison would receive
multiple vaccinations that extend the duration of vaccine protection and
defend against recurring infection in latently infected animals. The
initial decrease in population seroprevalence will likely be slow due to
high initial seroprevalence (40-60\%), long-lived antibodies, and the
culling of some vaccinated bison that were subsequently exposed to field
strain Brucella and reacted positively on serologic tests. Vaccination
is unlikely to eradicate B. abort-us from Yellowstone bison, but could
be an effective tool for reducing the level of infection. Our approach
and findings have applicability world-wide for managers dealing with
intractable wildlife diseases that cross wildlife-livestock and
wildlife-human interfaces and affect public health or economic
well-being. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Tags
Management
Conservation
Ecosystem
Wildlife
National-park
Synchrony
Bovine
tuberculosis
Abortus strain rb51
Fluorescence polarization assay
Serological assays