A model of bovine tuberculosis in the badger Meles meles: the inclusion of cattle and the use of a live test
Authored by GC Smith, CL Cheeseman, RS Clifton-Hadley, D Wilkinson
Date Published: 2001
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2664.2001.00610.x
Sponsors:
Animal Health and Veterinary Group
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1. An individual-based stochastic simulation model was used to
investigate the control of bovine tuberculosis (TB) in the European
badger Meles meles by using a live test to determine the presence of
infection. The model was an extension of earlier models, and nearly all
population and epidemiological parameters were derived from one study
site.
2. This is the first TB model to examine sex differences in disease
epidemiology, and the transmission of TB from badgers to cattle. The
latter is an essential step if reactive badger control strategies are to
be modelled.
3. Heterogeneity was introduced to the simulation model by the use of a
carrying capacity, which defined the maximum number of breeding females
per social group.
4. The prevalence of TB, and the number of simulated cattle herd
breakdowns, was reduced for all control strategies using a live test, namely localised culling, ring culling and proactive culling. However, only proactive culling resulted in a marked reduction in these values
within a few years.
5. If trapping efficacy was increased above its current value (80\%), this did not improve the effectiveness of these culling strategies.
6. If the number of individual badgers caught and tested per social
group was doubled from two to four animals per group, then the overall
level of effectiveness of these strategies could be doubled.
7. The effectiveness could be improved if the sensitivity of the live
test was increased, but did not continue to show an improvement above a
sensitivity of about 70\%.
8. Given the constraints of the current live test sensitivity (41\%) and
a trapping efficacy of 80\%, proactive culling, following the testing of
four individuals per group, led to an average of three cattle herd
breakdowns per year in the simulation, compared with an average of 31
per year when simulating the live test trial as used between 1994 and
1996.
Tags
Dynamics
Infection
population
transmission
Mycobacterium-bovis
Density
Fertility-control
Stochastic simulation-model
Southwest england
European badger