Cowdria ruminantium infection in ticks in the Kruger National Park

Citation
Tf. Peter et al., Cowdria ruminantium infection in ticks in the Kruger National Park, VET REC, 145(11), 1999, pp. 304-307
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Veterinary Medicine/Animal Health
Journal title
VETERINARY RECORD
ISSN journal
00424900 → ACNP
Volume
145
Issue
11
Year of publication
1999
Pages
304 - 307
Database
ISI
SICI code
0042-4900(19990911)145:11<304:CRIITI>2.0.ZU;2-Q
Abstract
Adult Amblyomma hebraeum ticks, the principle vector of heartwater (cowdrio sis) of domestic ruminants in southern Africa, were collected in pheromone traps placed in Kruger National Park, an exclusively wildlife sanctuary in South Africa. These ticks transmitted Cowdria ruminantium, the rickettsial agent causing heartwater, to a susceptible goat, resulting in acute, fatal disease. C ruminantium was isolated in bovine endothelial cell culture from the plasma of this animal during the febrile stage of the disease and tran smitted to susceptible goats, causing fatal heartwater. The prevalence of C ruminantium infection in 292 ticks was determined by polymerase chain reac tion (PCR) analysis to be 1.7 per cent (95 per cent confidence interval 0.7 1 to 4.0 per cent). A DNA probe analysis, which is less sensitive than PCR, detected infection in three of the five PCR-positive ticks. The remaining infections were below the detection limit of the DNA probe, which is approx imately 70,000 organisms. This is the first evidence that a vector-wildlife cycle of transmission of C ruminantium can be maintained independently of domestic ruminants.