Epidemiology of bovine ephemeral fever in Australia 1981-1985

Aust J Biol Sci. 1987;40(2):125-36. doi: 10.1071/bi9870125.

Abstract

Bovine ephemeral fever is an important viral disease of cattle in Australia. The disease occurred each year, principally in summer and autumn, between 1981 and 1985. Queensland and the northern half of New South Wales were areas of greatest activity with only sporadic cases being reported from the Northern Territory and the northern third of Western Australia. Since 1981, the disease has been endemic in an extensive area of eastern Australia and has tended to occur in widely scattered outbreaks rather than the north-south advancing wave form of the epidemics of 1936-37, 1967-68, 1970-71 and 1972-74. The southernmost outbreaks between 1981 and 1985 were well within the limits of these earlier epidemics. The pattern of disease appears to have become seasonally endemic rather than periodically endemic in the northern two-thirds of eastern Australia. Ephemeral fever was not recorded in Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia or the southern part of Western Australia between 1981 and 1985. The disease was most frequently reported in cattle under 3 years of age, but also occurred in older cattle.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Australia
  • Cattle
  • Disease Outbreaks / veterinary*
  • Ephemeral Fever / epidemiology*
  • Ephemeral Fever / microbiology
  • Seasons