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A study of tuberculosis in road traffic-killed badgers on the edge of the British bovine TB epidemic area

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  • Elsa Sandoval Barron
  • Ben Swift
  • Julian Chantrey
  • Robert Christley
  • Richard Gardner
  • Chris Jewell
  • Ian McGrath
  • Andrew Mitchell
  • Colman O’Cathail
  • Alison Prosser
  • Sue Ridout
  • Gonzalo Sanchez-Cabezudo
  • Noel Smith
  • Dorina Timofte
  • Nicola Williams
  • Malcolm Bennett
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Article number17206
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>6/12/2018
<mark>Journal</mark>Scientific Reports
Issue number1
Volume8
Number of pages8
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

The role of badgers in the geographic expansion of the bovine tuberculosis (bTB) epidemic in England is unknown: indeed there have been few published studies of bTB in badgers outside of the Southwest of England where the infection is now endemic in cattle. Cheshire is now on the edge of the expanding area of England in which bTB is considered endemic in cattle. Previous studies, over a decade ago when bovine infection was rare in Cheshire, found no or only few infected badgers in the south eastern area of the county. In this study, carried out in 2014, road-killed badgers were collected through a network of local stakeholders (farmers, veterinarians, wildlife groups, government agencies), and Mycobacterium bovis was isolated from 21% (20/94) badger carcasses. Furthermore, there was strong evidence for co-localisation of M. bovis SB0129 (genotype 25) infection in both badgers and cattle herds at a county scale. While these findings suggest that both badgers and cattle are part of the same geographically expanding epidemic, the direction of any cross-species transmission and the drivers of this expansion cannot be determined. The study also demonstrated the utility of using road-killed badgers collected by stakeholders as a means of wildlife TB surveillance.