A conceptual model of tuberculosis transmission risk in free-ranging bison herds of northern Canada

Tuberculosis transmission in free-ranging bison of northern Canada is of significant concern to wildlife managers because of its effects on condition and mortality in bison herds and the potential for transmission to local hunters and neighbouring cattle populations. The chronic nature of tuberculos...

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Main Author: Dewar, David
Other Authors: Gates, C. Cormack, Boydell, Tony, Noble, Michael-Anne
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10170/484
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spelling ftviurr:oai:viurrspace.ca:10170/484 2023-06-18T03:42:20+02:00 A conceptual model of tuberculosis transmission risk in free-ranging bison herds of northern Canada Dewar, David Gates, C. Cormack Boydell, Tony Noble, Michael-Anne 2012-04-04 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10170/484 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/10170/484 Free-ranging bison tuberculosis transmission risk 2012 ftviurr 2023-06-04T20:20:39Z Tuberculosis transmission in free-ranging bison of northern Canada is of significant concern to wildlife managers because of its effects on condition and mortality in bison herds and the potential for transmission to local hunters and neighbouring cattle populations. The chronic nature of tuberculosis combined with the gregarious behaviours of bison permit its persistence in free-ranging herds even at low densities, which makes disease eradication difficult without whole herd depopulation. The protection of remaining non-infected free-ranging bison populations is thus of paramount importance to the conservation of specific disease-free wild bison in northern Canada and to the economic stability of cattle farms. Detection of movements and removal of dispersing animals between spatially separated free-ranging populations reduces the potential for contact between bison populations and minimizes the probability of tuberculosis transmission. In this thesis, a conceptual model was developed to assess the potential for tuberculosis transmission between two infected bison herds (Nyarling River and Garden River) in Wood Buffalo National Park and the spatially separated, Mackenzie Bison herd in the Northwest Territories. This conceptual model identifies gaps in knowledge and highlights areas where research is required to ensure accurate evaluation of tuberculosis transmission risk in freeranging bison. The main finding was that the bison cohort representing the highest risk for tuberculosis transmission between spatially separated free-ranging herds is mature males. The propensity of mature males to make long-distance movements is also not fully understood and research to predict these movements would make a significant contribution to risk assessment and management planning to reduce the probability of contact between infected and non-infected bison populations. Other/Unknown Material Northwest Territories Wood Buffalo Wood Buffalo National Park VIURRSpace (Royal Roads University and Vancouver Island University) Northwest Territories Canada Wood Buffalo ENVELOPE(-112.007,-112.007,57.664,57.664) Nyarling River ENVELOPE(-113.387,-113.387,60.691,60.691)
institution Open Polar
collection VIURRSpace (Royal Roads University and Vancouver Island University)
op_collection_id ftviurr
language unknown
topic Free-ranging bison
tuberculosis transmission risk
spellingShingle Free-ranging bison
tuberculosis transmission risk
Dewar, David
A conceptual model of tuberculosis transmission risk in free-ranging bison herds of northern Canada
topic_facet Free-ranging bison
tuberculosis transmission risk
description Tuberculosis transmission in free-ranging bison of northern Canada is of significant concern to wildlife managers because of its effects on condition and mortality in bison herds and the potential for transmission to local hunters and neighbouring cattle populations. The chronic nature of tuberculosis combined with the gregarious behaviours of bison permit its persistence in free-ranging herds even at low densities, which makes disease eradication difficult without whole herd depopulation. The protection of remaining non-infected free-ranging bison populations is thus of paramount importance to the conservation of specific disease-free wild bison in northern Canada and to the economic stability of cattle farms. Detection of movements and removal of dispersing animals between spatially separated free-ranging populations reduces the potential for contact between bison populations and minimizes the probability of tuberculosis transmission. In this thesis, a conceptual model was developed to assess the potential for tuberculosis transmission between two infected bison herds (Nyarling River and Garden River) in Wood Buffalo National Park and the spatially separated, Mackenzie Bison herd in the Northwest Territories. This conceptual model identifies gaps in knowledge and highlights areas where research is required to ensure accurate evaluation of tuberculosis transmission risk in freeranging bison. The main finding was that the bison cohort representing the highest risk for tuberculosis transmission between spatially separated free-ranging herds is mature males. The propensity of mature males to make long-distance movements is also not fully understood and research to predict these movements would make a significant contribution to risk assessment and management planning to reduce the probability of contact between infected and non-infected bison populations.
author2 Gates, C. Cormack
Boydell, Tony
Noble, Michael-Anne
author Dewar, David
author_facet Dewar, David
author_sort Dewar, David
title A conceptual model of tuberculosis transmission risk in free-ranging bison herds of northern Canada
title_short A conceptual model of tuberculosis transmission risk in free-ranging bison herds of northern Canada
title_full A conceptual model of tuberculosis transmission risk in free-ranging bison herds of northern Canada
title_fullStr A conceptual model of tuberculosis transmission risk in free-ranging bison herds of northern Canada
title_full_unstemmed A conceptual model of tuberculosis transmission risk in free-ranging bison herds of northern Canada
title_sort conceptual model of tuberculosis transmission risk in free-ranging bison herds of northern canada
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10170/484
long_lat ENVELOPE(-112.007,-112.007,57.664,57.664)
ENVELOPE(-113.387,-113.387,60.691,60.691)
geographic Northwest Territories
Canada
Wood Buffalo
Nyarling River
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
Canada
Wood Buffalo
Nyarling River
genre Northwest Territories
Wood Buffalo
Wood Buffalo National Park
genre_facet Northwest Territories
Wood Buffalo
Wood Buffalo National Park
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10170/484
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