Engaging northern communities in the monitoring of country food safety and wildlife health

This project has proven the benefits of having northern laboratories and by training several northerners for wildlife sampling and laboratory techniques. In collaboration with the scientists working at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and Gdansk University, we achieved the following: 1) Developme...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Manon Simard, Alvin A. Gajadhar, Andria Jones, Antoni Jerzy Rokicki, Brett Elkin, Burton Blais, Frederick Leighton, Lorry B. Forbes, Ole Nielsen
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Borealis 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:65b3b0086293db9f52ef82e86f76f1eb70c673938b8171434b2a031a4a05af63
id dataone:sha256:65b3b0086293db9f52ef82e86f76f1eb70c673938b8171434b2a031a4a05af63
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:sha256:65b3b0086293db9f52ef82e86f76f1eb70c673938b8171434b2a031a4a05af63 2024-11-03T19:45:06+00:00 Engaging northern communities in the monitoring of country food safety and wildlife health Manon Simard Alvin A. Gajadhar Andria Jones Antoni Jerzy Rokicki Brett Elkin Burton Blais Frederick Leighton Lorry B. Forbes Ole Nielsen BEGINDATE: 2007-04-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2012-03-31T00:00:00Z 2012-10-17T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:65b3b0086293db9f52ef82e86f76f1eb70c673938b8171434b2a031a4a05af63 unknown Borealis Zoonosis Traditional food E. coli Pathogen Mammals Salmonella Trichinella Fishes Toxoplasma gondii Anisakidae Dataset 2012 dataone:urn:node:BOREALIS 2024-11-03T19:08:41Z This project has proven the benefits of having northern laboratories and by training several northerners for wildlife sampling and laboratory techniques. In collaboration with the scientists working at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and Gdansk University, we achieved the following: 1) Development of two diagnostic tests, adapted for northern conditions, for the presumptive presence of E.coli 0157:H7 and Salmonella sp., 2) results were negative for all samples (n=129) and 2 community freezers, 3) all family members of the Anisakidae nematodes were present in traditionally eaten fish or in marine mammals from Nain, Labrador, Ungava and Hudson Bays up to Arviat, Nunavut, 4) presence of adult worms in marine mammals proves their transmission in the marine food web, 5) only freeze resistant T. nativa and Trichinella T6 were identified, 6) Trichinella infection was widespread among terrestrial carnivores, but amongst marine mammals, walrus and polar bears were the only ones infected, 7) black bears and walruses are the most common source of human infection in the north, 8) two diagnostic tests were developed for Toxoplasma gondii (multiplex PCR and multi-species enzyme immunoassay (ELISA)) that can be used to detect Toxoplasma DNA in meat, and antibodies in blood or tissue fluid, respectively, 9) an absorbent filter paper method to collect blood under Arctic conditions for the diagnosis of Toxoplasma gondii was assessed in collaboration with the caribou Network (CARMA) with good results. 1 0) a qualitative research study undertaken in Nain, Nunatsiavut demonstrated that residents would like research results co-presented to them by the Nunatsiavut Government and the researcher, in a hands-on fashion that emphasized visual methods and one-on-one interaction, 11) a data-entry website and interface was developed featuring the ability to add, modify, search, export and delete IPY specimen data. The data entered using this system is securely stored in the latest version of the Canadian Cooperative Wildlife Health Centre database at the University of Saskatchewan. Dataset Arctic Arviat Nain Nunavut walrus* Borealis (via DataONE) Arctic Nunavut Hudson Nain ENVELOPE(-61.695,-61.695,56.542,56.542)
institution Open Polar
collection Borealis (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:BOREALIS
language unknown
topic Zoonosis
Traditional food
E. coli
Pathogen
Mammals
Salmonella
Trichinella
Fishes
Toxoplasma gondii
Anisakidae
spellingShingle Zoonosis
Traditional food
E. coli
Pathogen
Mammals
Salmonella
Trichinella
Fishes
Toxoplasma gondii
Anisakidae
Manon Simard
Alvin A. Gajadhar
Andria Jones
Antoni Jerzy Rokicki
Brett Elkin
Burton Blais
Frederick Leighton
Lorry B. Forbes
Ole Nielsen
Engaging northern communities in the monitoring of country food safety and wildlife health
topic_facet Zoonosis
Traditional food
E. coli
Pathogen
Mammals
Salmonella
Trichinella
Fishes
Toxoplasma gondii
Anisakidae
description This project has proven the benefits of having northern laboratories and by training several northerners for wildlife sampling and laboratory techniques. In collaboration with the scientists working at the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and Gdansk University, we achieved the following: 1) Development of two diagnostic tests, adapted for northern conditions, for the presumptive presence of E.coli 0157:H7 and Salmonella sp., 2) results were negative for all samples (n=129) and 2 community freezers, 3) all family members of the Anisakidae nematodes were present in traditionally eaten fish or in marine mammals from Nain, Labrador, Ungava and Hudson Bays up to Arviat, Nunavut, 4) presence of adult worms in marine mammals proves their transmission in the marine food web, 5) only freeze resistant T. nativa and Trichinella T6 were identified, 6) Trichinella infection was widespread among terrestrial carnivores, but amongst marine mammals, walrus and polar bears were the only ones infected, 7) black bears and walruses are the most common source of human infection in the north, 8) two diagnostic tests were developed for Toxoplasma gondii (multiplex PCR and multi-species enzyme immunoassay (ELISA)) that can be used to detect Toxoplasma DNA in meat, and antibodies in blood or tissue fluid, respectively, 9) an absorbent filter paper method to collect blood under Arctic conditions for the diagnosis of Toxoplasma gondii was assessed in collaboration with the caribou Network (CARMA) with good results. 1 0) a qualitative research study undertaken in Nain, Nunatsiavut demonstrated that residents would like research results co-presented to them by the Nunatsiavut Government and the researcher, in a hands-on fashion that emphasized visual methods and one-on-one interaction, 11) a data-entry website and interface was developed featuring the ability to add, modify, search, export and delete IPY specimen data. The data entered using this system is securely stored in the latest version of the Canadian Cooperative Wildlife Health Centre database at the University of Saskatchewan.
format Dataset
author Manon Simard
Alvin A. Gajadhar
Andria Jones
Antoni Jerzy Rokicki
Brett Elkin
Burton Blais
Frederick Leighton
Lorry B. Forbes
Ole Nielsen
author_facet Manon Simard
Alvin A. Gajadhar
Andria Jones
Antoni Jerzy Rokicki
Brett Elkin
Burton Blais
Frederick Leighton
Lorry B. Forbes
Ole Nielsen
author_sort Manon Simard
title Engaging northern communities in the monitoring of country food safety and wildlife health
title_short Engaging northern communities in the monitoring of country food safety and wildlife health
title_full Engaging northern communities in the monitoring of country food safety and wildlife health
title_fullStr Engaging northern communities in the monitoring of country food safety and wildlife health
title_full_unstemmed Engaging northern communities in the monitoring of country food safety and wildlife health
title_sort engaging northern communities in the monitoring of country food safety and wildlife health
publisher Borealis
publishDate 2012
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:65b3b0086293db9f52ef82e86f76f1eb70c673938b8171434b2a031a4a05af63
op_coverage BEGINDATE: 2007-04-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2012-03-31T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.695,-61.695,56.542,56.542)
geographic Arctic
Nunavut
Hudson
Nain
geographic_facet Arctic
Nunavut
Hudson
Nain
genre Arctic
Arviat
Nain
Nunavut
walrus*
genre_facet Arctic
Arviat
Nain
Nunavut
walrus*
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