Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
1 July 1998 DEMONSTRATION OF A CARRIER STATE FOR COWDRIA RUMINANTIUM IN WILD RUMINANTS FROM AFRICA
Trevor F. Peter, Euan C. Anderson, Michael J. Burridge, Suman M. Mahan
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Four wild African ruminants, eland (Taurotragus oryx), giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis), kudu (Tragephalus strepsiceros strepsiceros), and blue wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus), were experimentally infected with the rickettsia Cowdria ruminantium, the tickborne agent causing heartwater in domestic ruminants. The infections were established, and C. ruminantium was transmitted to naive small ruminants by the vector Amblyomma hebraeum when transmission attempts were made at days 128 (eland and wildebeest), 85 (giraffe), and 24 (kudu) post infection. These wild ruminants, which are natural hosts for the tick vector, and which commonly occur within heartwater-endemic areas of Africa, are likely to play important roles in the epidemiology of heartwater as reservoirs of C. ruminantium infection. These findings also demonstrate that considerable risks are associated with the translocation of wild ruminants from heartwater-endemic areas to heartwater-free areas such as the northern and southern American mainlands, which have large populations of susceptible domestic and wild ruminant hosts and tick species that are capable of transmitting the disease.

Peter, Anderson, Burridge, and Mahan: DEMONSTRATION OF A CARRIER STATE FOR COWDRIA RUMINANTIUM IN WILD RUMINANTS FROM AFRICA
Trevor F. Peter, Euan C. Anderson, Michael J. Burridge, and Suman M. Mahan "DEMONSTRATION OF A CARRIER STATE FOR COWDRIA RUMINANTIUM IN WILD RUMINANTS FROM AFRICA," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 34(3), 567-575, (1 July 1998). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-34.3.567
Received: 16 July 1997; Published: 1 July 1998
KEYWORDS
Amblyomma hebraeum
Cowdria ruminantium
experimental transmission
Heartwater
wild ruminants
Back to Top