Investigation of African swine fever outbreaks in pigs outside the controlled areas of South Africa, 2012–2017
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Date
Authors
Janse van Rensburg, Leana
Van Heerden, Juanita
Penrith, Mary-Louise
Heath, Livio E.
Rametse, Thapelo
Etter, Eric Marcel Charles
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
AOSIS OpenJournals
Abstract
South Africa historically experienced sporadic African swine fever (ASF) outbreaks in domestic
pigs in the northern parts of the country. This was subsequently indicated to be because of
spillover from the sylvatic cycle of ASF between warthog and tampans (soft ticks) in the area.
South Africa declared this area an ASF-controlled area in 1935, and the area is still controlled
in terms of the Animal Diseases Act, 1984 (Act 35 of 1984). Two main epidemics of ASF in
domestic pigs were identified outside of the South African ASF-controlled area. The first
occurred in 2012 with outbreaks in Gauteng and Mpumalanga provinces, and the second
occurred in 2016–2017 with outbreaks in the North West, Free State and Northern Cape
provinces. These were the first ASF epidemics in South Africa associated with transmission of
the disease via a domestic cycle. This study found that the spread of ASF in these epidemics
was mainly via auctions, swill feeding and scavenging. These three aspects need to be
addressed in terms of awareness and education on the disease including implementation
of biosecurity measures in order to prevent future ASF outbreaks in South Africa. Specific
biosecurity measures should be implemented in the semi-commercial sector to prevent
ASF-infected pigs and pig products from being moved to naïve pigs and therefore spreading
the disease.
Description
Keywords
Domestic cycle, Biosecurity, Disease control, Auctions, Swill, African swine fever (ASF)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Janse van Rensburg, L., Van Heerden, J., Penrith, M.-L., Heath, L.E., Rametse, T. & Etter, E.M.C., 2020, ‘Investigation
of African swine fever outbreaks in pigs outside the controlled areas of South Africa, 2012–2017’, Journal of the South African Veterinary
Association 91(0), a1997. https://DOI.org/10.4102/jsava.v91i0.1997.