Could wild boar be the Trans-Siberian transmitter of African swine fever?

Transbound Emerg Dis. 2021 May;68(3):1465-1475. doi: 10.1111/tbed.13814. Epub 2020 Sep 26.

Abstract

China has experienced a sudden multi-focal and multi-round of African swine fever (ASF) outbreaks during 2018. The subsequent epidemiological survey resulted in a debate including the possibility of a transboundary spread from European Russia to China through wild boar. We contribute to the debate by assessing a hypothetical overland Euro-Siberian transmission path and its associated ASF arrival dates. We selected the maximum entropy algorithm for spatial modelling of ASF-infected wild boar and the Spatial Distribution Modeller in ArcGIS to plot Least Cost Paths (LCPs) between Eastern Europe and NE China. The arrival dates of ASF-infected wild boar have been predicted by cumulative maximum transmission distances per season and cover with their associated minimum time intervals along the LCPs. Our results show high costs for wild boar to cross Kazakhstan, Xinjiang (NW China) and/or Mongolia to reach NE China. Instead, the Paths lead almost straight eastward along the 59.5° northern latitude through Siberia and would have taken a minimum of 219 or 260 days. Therefore, infected wild boar moving all the way along the LCP could not have been the source of the ASF infection in NE China on 2 August 2018.

Keywords: African swine fever; Least Cost Path; NE China; Russian Federation; spatial modelling; transmission; wild boar.

MeSH terms

  • African Swine Fever / transmission*
  • African Swine Fever Virus / physiology*
  • Animal Distribution*
  • Animals
  • Seasons
  • Siberia
  • Sus scrofa
  • Swine