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1.
Zoonoses Public Health ; 65(4): 412-419, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29423934

ABSTRACT

Feral cats raise public health concerns due to their large population numbers and ability to harbour pathogens that cause disease in people, pets, and wildlife. Information regarding the potential for feral cats to intersect with areas frequented by humans is lacking. This study examined the potential for feral cats and human territories to overlap in the Richmond metropolitan area of Central Virginia. Feral cats (n = 275) were trapped for monthly trap-neuter-release (TNR) clinics from July to November 2016. A geographic information system (GIS) was used to map feral cat trapping locations, elementary and preschools, public parks, and community gardens, and to evaluate the potential for cat interaction with these areas, presuming a maximum habitat radius of 0.44 miles. We found that 8.0% of feral cats in the Richmond metropolitan area had potential to range onto public elementary or preschool property, and 81.5% of feral cats trapped in Richmond City had potential to roam into one or more places of interest, including elementary and preschool grounds, public parks, and community gardens. This provides public health, veterinary, and human health professionals with important information that can be used to focus resources in an effort to reduce zoonosis associated with feral cat populations.


Subject(s)
Cat Diseases/transmission , Disease Reservoirs/veterinary , Geographic Information Systems/statistics & numerical data , Rabies/veterinary , Zoonoses/transmission , Animals , Animals, Wild/parasitology , Animals, Wild/physiology , Animals, Wild/virology , Cat Diseases/epidemiology , Cats , Cities/epidemiology , Cities/statistics & numerical data , Disease Reservoirs/parasitology , Disease Reservoirs/virology , Humans , One Health , Population Control , Public Health , Rabies/epidemiology , Rabies/transmission , Rabies/virology , Virginia/epidemiology , Zoonoses/epidemiology , Zoonoses/parasitology , Zoonoses/virology
2.
Zoonoses Public Health ; 61(3): 202-7, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23773825

ABSTRACT

Eastern Shore of Virginia red, round tomatoes contaminated with Salmonella serotype Newport pattern JJPX01.0061 have been a source of several multistate outbreaks within the last 10 years. No source of the contamination has yet been identified. The goal of this study was to evaluate wildlife as a potential source of contamination. Faecal samples from deer, turtles and birds were collected between November 2010 and July 2011 from seventeen locations on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. A total of 262 samples were tested for the presence of Salmonella using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). A total of 23 (8.8%) samples tested positive for Salmonella spp. and were further characterized by serotyping and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) subtyping. Overall, twelve serotypes were identified, including Salmonella serotype Javiana, another common serotype associated with tomato-related outbreaks. Only one avian sample collected in July 2011 was determined to be positive for S. Newport pattern 61. This sample was collected from the ground at a site where birds, mostly gulls, were congregating. Although many of the avian samples from this site were dry, the site yielded eleven positive Salmonella samples. This suggests that certain Salmonella serotypes may persist in the environment despite extreme conditions. The recovery of one Newport pattern 61 isolate alone does not yield much information regarding the environmental reservoirs of this pathogen, but when combined with other data including the recovery of several isolates of Javiana from birds, it suggests that birds might be a potential source of Salmonella contamination for tomatoes on the Eastern Shore.


Subject(s)
Bird Diseases/epidemiology , Deer/microbiology , Salmonella Infections/epidemiology , Salmonella/immunology , Solanum lycopersicum/microbiology , Turtles/microbiology , Animals , Bird Diseases/microbiology , Charadriiformes , Ducks , Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field/veterinary , Feces/microbiology , Food Microbiology , Foodborne Diseases/epidemiology , Foodborne Diseases/microbiology , Geese , Humans , Salmonella/classification , Salmonella/isolation & purification , Salmonella Infections/microbiology , Serogroup , Serotyping/veterinary , Virginia/epidemiology
3.
Zoonoses Public Health ; 60(8): 543-8, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23398718

ABSTRACT

In 2008, two deer hunters in Virginia and Connecticut were infected with a unique strain of pseudocowpox virus, a parapoxvirus. To estimate the prevalence of this virus, and in an attempt to define the reservoir, Parapoxvirus surveillance was undertaken between November 2009 and January 2010. 125 samples from four ruminant species (cows, goat, sheep and white-tailed deer) were collected in Virginia, and nine samples from white-tailed deer were collected in Connecticut. We found no evidence that the parapoxvirus species that infected the deer hunters is circulating among domesticated ruminants or white-tailed deer. However, parapoxvirus DNA of a different parapoxvirus species, bovine papular stomatitis virus (BPSV), was detected in 31 samples obtained from asymptomatic cattle in Virginia. Parapoxvirus DNA-positive cattle originated from the same counties indicating probable transmission among animals. Molecular analysis identified BPSV as the parapoxvirus affecting animals. Asymptomatic parapoxvirus infections in livestock, particularly young animals, may be common, and further investigation will inform our knowledge of virus transmission.


Subject(s)
Cattle Diseases/epidemiology , Deer/virology , Goat Diseases/epidemiology , Parapoxvirus/isolation & purification , Poxviridae Infections/veterinary , Sheep Diseases/epidemiology , Animals , Cattle , Cattle Diseases/virology , Connecticut/epidemiology , DNA, Viral/analysis , DNA, Viral/genetics , Disease Reservoirs , Epidemiological Monitoring , Female , Goat Diseases/virology , Goats , Humans , Male , Parapoxvirus/classification , Parapoxvirus/genetics , Phylogeny , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Poxviridae Infections/epidemiology , Poxviridae Infections/virology , Prevalence , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/virology , Virginia/epidemiology , Zoonoses
4.
Parassitologia ; 46(1-2): 67-70, 2004 Jun.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15305689

ABSTRACT

Geographic information systems (GIS) and remote sensing (RS) technologies are being used increasingly to study the spatial and temporal patterns of some parasitic diseases of medical and veterinary importance. At the same time, the incorporation of GIS in this field shows the scarcity of the data and images available, which sometime discourage researchers that still look at GIS as a system too difficult and unusable for medical study. Aware of this problem and supported by success of earlier MMDb's for Africa, Asia and South America, the authors' aim is to construct and offer an MMDb for Europe. The initial MMDb is composed with vector images covering an area situated from -11 degrees-70 degrees N to 58 degrees-30 degrees E. Specifically, data layers include: a) Global Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) 16 days at 250 m spatial resolution designed to provide consistent spatial and temporal comparisons of vegetation conditions, supplied in the MMDb as seasonal and annual composite images from 2000 to 2003, b) MODIS Land Surface Temperature (LST) calculated from daytime and nighttime observations at 8 day intervals at 1 km spatial resolution, supplied in the MMDb as seasonal and annual composites images for day (maximum) temperatures, night (minimum) temperatures from 2000 to 2003, c) GTOPO30 Digital Elevation Model (DEM) at 1 km spatial resolution, d) United States Geological Survey (USGS) Land use/land cover scheme, e) USGS actual and potential evapotranspiration supplied for all 12 months as a grid at 50 km spatial resolution, f) USGS precipitation showing the amount of rainfall for all 12 months supplied as a grid at 50 km spatial resolution, g) USGS shapefiles of administrative and political boundaries, cities, towns, villages, lakes, rivers, streams, road, railroads and more. The MMDb projection will be in geographic latitude-longitude, decimal degree format. This global format is most commonly used for public access map database resources and can be readily re-projected as needed for compatibility with various national mapping systems. There is no "required" software, and end users need only common commercial GIS software packages that have mutual import-export functions. Additionally, the MMDb is meant to be a dynamic resource that end users may improve and modify with other regional data.


Subject(s)
Databases, Factual , Geographic Information Systems , Topography, Medical , Animals , Disease Outbreaks , Disease Reservoirs , Ecology , Europe , Humans , Parasitic Diseases/epidemiology
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