Mapping bovine tuberculosis in Great Britain using environmental data.

The incidence of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) is increasing in Great Britain, exacerbated by the temporary suspension of herd testing in 2001 for fear of spreading the much more contagious foot and mouth disease. The transmission pathways of BTB remain poorly understood. Current hypotheses suggest the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wint, G, Robinson, T, Bourn, D, Durr, P, Hay, S, Randolph, SE, Rogers, D
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2002
_version_ 1826259885471301632
author Wint, G
Robinson, T
Bourn, D
Durr, P
Hay, S
Randolph, SE
Rogers, D
author_facet Wint, G
Robinson, T
Bourn, D
Durr, P
Hay, S
Randolph, SE
Rogers, D
author_sort Wint, G
collection OXFORD
description The incidence of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) is increasing in Great Britain, exacerbated by the temporary suspension of herd testing in 2001 for fear of spreading the much more contagious foot and mouth disease. The transmission pathways of BTB remain poorly understood. Current hypotheses suggest the disease is introduced into susceptible herds from a wildlife reservoir (principally the Eurasian Badger) and/or from cattle purchased from infected areas, while the role of climatic factors in transmission has generally been ignored. Here, we show how remotely sensed satellite data, which provide good indicators of a variety of climatic factors, can be used to describe the distribution of BTB in Great Britain in 1997, and suggest how such data could be used to produce BTB risk maps for the future.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T18:56:53Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:12240721-fd23-4fed-bac5-d858bb38ec0d
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T18:56:53Z
publishDate 2002
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:12240721-fd23-4fed-bac5-d858bb38ec0d2022-03-26T10:06:15ZMapping bovine tuberculosis in Great Britain using environmental data.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:12240721-fd23-4fed-bac5-d858bb38ec0dEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2002Wint, GRobinson, TBourn, DDurr, PHay, SRandolph, SERogers, DThe incidence of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) is increasing in Great Britain, exacerbated by the temporary suspension of herd testing in 2001 for fear of spreading the much more contagious foot and mouth disease. The transmission pathways of BTB remain poorly understood. Current hypotheses suggest the disease is introduced into susceptible herds from a wildlife reservoir (principally the Eurasian Badger) and/or from cattle purchased from infected areas, while the role of climatic factors in transmission has generally been ignored. Here, we show how remotely sensed satellite data, which provide good indicators of a variety of climatic factors, can be used to describe the distribution of BTB in Great Britain in 1997, and suggest how such data could be used to produce BTB risk maps for the future.
spellingShingle Wint, G
Robinson, T
Bourn, D
Durr, P
Hay, S
Randolph, SE
Rogers, D
Mapping bovine tuberculosis in Great Britain using environmental data.
title Mapping bovine tuberculosis in Great Britain using environmental data.
title_full Mapping bovine tuberculosis in Great Britain using environmental data.
title_fullStr Mapping bovine tuberculosis in Great Britain using environmental data.
title_full_unstemmed Mapping bovine tuberculosis in Great Britain using environmental data.
title_short Mapping bovine tuberculosis in Great Britain using environmental data.
title_sort mapping bovine tuberculosis in great britain using environmental data
work_keys_str_mv AT wintg mappingbovinetuberculosisingreatbritainusingenvironmentaldata
AT robinsont mappingbovinetuberculosisingreatbritainusingenvironmentaldata
AT bournd mappingbovinetuberculosisingreatbritainusingenvironmentaldata
AT durrp mappingbovinetuberculosisingreatbritainusingenvironmentaldata
AT hays mappingbovinetuberculosisingreatbritainusingenvironmentaldata
AT randolphse mappingbovinetuberculosisingreatbritainusingenvironmentaldata
AT rogersd mappingbovinetuberculosisingreatbritainusingenvironmentaldata