Management of bovine tuberculosis in brushtail possums in New Zealand: predictions from a spatially explicit, individual-based model
Authored by David S L Ramsey, Murray G Efford
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2010.01839.x
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Abstract
P>1. Bovine tuberculosis Mycobacterium bovis (Tb) in brushtail possums
Trichosurus vulpecula in New Zealand continues to pose a threat to the
livestock industry. While significant reductions in cattle reactor rates
have been achieved by widespread possum control, there is still a need
for significant improvement, particularly in relation to limiting the
further spread of the disease.
2. A recently developed oral Tb vaccine based on bacille Calmette-Guerin
(BCG) offers a possible alternative to poison baiting for widespread
disease control in possums. In addition, there is ongoing development of
orally delivered fertility control vaccines (FC) as an alternative
method for possum control. However, there is some doubt about whether
control strategies based on oral BCG or FC can offer cost-effective
solutions for disease control in possums.
3. We developed a spatially explicit, individual-based model (IBM) of Tb
in possums to address perceived shortcomings in existing non-spatial
models, particularly their failure to model realistically the spatial
scale of transmission. The spatial IBM was also used to compare the
cost-effectiveness of control strategies using BCG and combined BCG/FC
to existing strategies based on lethal control. In particular, we
explored the effectiveness of strategies to contain a localized
outbreak.
4. Considering the cumulative cost of control to contain a localized Tb
outbreak, the most cost-effective strategy combined an initial cull of
possums with both BCG and FC applied every 3 years. In addition, the
combined culling/BCG/FC strategy required only a 2- to 3-km control
buffer around the outbreak site to achieve successful containment. By
comparison, control strategies that used BCG or BCG/FC alone were not as
cost-effective as they required at least a 5-km buffer around the
outbreak site to achieve containment.
5. Synthesis and applications. Current strategies for Tb control in
possums rely heavily on lethal control techniques, but there is public
antipathy in New Zealand to the widespread use of toxicants for pest
control. Strategies for Tb control that use oral vaccination of possums
with BCG, or combined BCG/FC, in combination with a single initial cull
of the population offer a cost-effective alternative for local
eradication and containing disease spread. Such strategies would greatly
reduce the need for repeated application of toxicants.
Tags
Infection
Control strategies
Mycobacterium-bovis
Populations
Duration
Fertility-control
Badger meles-meles
Oral vaccination
Bacille calmette-guerin
Trichosurus-vulpecula