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Review and Scientific Articles

Feral ferrets (Mustela furo) as hosts and sentinels of tuberculosis in New Zealand

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Pages 42-53 | Received 29 Jan 2014, Accepted 21 Oct 2014, Published online: 10 Mar 2015
 

Abstract

The control and eventual eradication of bovine tuberculosis (TB) poses major challenges in New Zealand, given the variety of wildlife species susceptible to TB, many of which are capable of onwards transmission of Mycobacterium bovis infection. Here we discuss the role of feral ferrets (Mustela furo), focussing on potential transmission or risk pathways that have implications for management of TB. Firstly inter-specific transmission to ferrets. Ferrets scavenge potentially infected wildlife, including other ferrets, thus prevalence of TB can be amplified through ferrets feeding on tuberculous carcasses, particularly brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula). Secondly intra-specific transmission between ferrets. The rate of ferret-ferret transmission depends on population density, and in some places ferret densities exceed the estimated threshold for disease persistence. TB can therefore potentially be maintained independently of other sources of infection. Thirdly transmission from ferrets to other wildlife. These include the main wildlife maintenance host, brushtail possums, that will occasionally scavenge potentially tuberculous ferret carcasses. Fourthly transmission from ferrets to livestock. This is considered to occur occasionally, but the actual rate of transmission has never been measured. Fifthly geographical spread. M. bovis-infected ferrets can travel large distances and cause new outbreaks of TB at locations previously free of TB, which may have caused an expansion of TB-endemic areas.Ferrets play a complex role in the TB cycle in New Zealand; they are capable of contracting, amplifying and transmitting M. bovis infection, sometimes resulting in ferret populations with a high prevalence of TB. However, ferret population densities are usually too low to sustain infection independently, and transmission to other wildlife or livestock appears a rarer event than with possums. Nevertheless, management of ferrets remains a key part of the National Pest Management Strategy for TB. Control is prudent where M. bovis-infected ferret populations exist in high numbers, to reduce the onward transmission risk of any self-sustained infection to livestock. When ferret numbers are well below the theoretical disease maintenance threshold, ferret control is still sometimes warranted because of the animals’ ability to acquire infection when young and, through dispersal, transport it outside TB-endemic areas. Ferrets can also be used as disease sentinels for TB, especially in areas where alternative sentinel species are rare or expensive to survey, and when sampling of possums is not cost-effective.

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Acknowledgements

Partial funding for the personnel hours involved in drafting this review was provided by TBfree New Zealand (Project R10735-01), with co-funding from the Ministry of Business, Innovation and employment (Contract C09X0803); neither party exerted influence over the content or significance of the research reviewed here, and the views expressed are solely those of the contributing authors. We thank Frank Cross (Landcare Research, Lincoln) for editorial assistance with the manuscript. Phil Cowan (Landcare Research, Lincoln) provided valuable comments on earlier drafts of the manuscript. Studies reported here involving experimental manipulation of live animals all obtained animal ethics approval from the Landcare Research Animal Ethics Committee, with approval details contained in the original reports. We finally thank Kirsten Vryenhoek of TBfree New Zealand/OSPRI for the compilation of the industry contract reports cited in this manuscript and for making them available online.

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