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Battling Bluetongue And Schmallenberg Virus: Local Scale Behavior Of Transmitting Vectors | 31397

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Battling bluetongue and schmallenberg virus: Local scale behavior of transmitting vectors

World Congress on Infectious Diseases

Anders Stockmarr

ScientificTracks Abstracts: J Infect Dis Ther

DOI: 10.4172/2332-0877.S1.002

Abstract

Bluetongue is an insect-borne viral disease that affects ruminants, primarily sheep, cattle and goats, caused by the Bluetongue
virus and transmitted by biting midges. Bluetongue outbreaks have a huge economic impact, and the cost of outbreaks in
the Netherlands in 2006 and 2007 alone has been estimated to around 200 million euros. Over the last decade, Bluetongue virus
has spread northwards from the Mediterranean area. Initially this was ascribed to climate changes, but it has since been realized
that a major contributing factor has been new transmitting vectors, Culicoides obsoletus and Culicoides pulicaris, which have
the ability to acquire and transmit the disease. Recently, Schmallenberg virus has emerged in Northern Europe transmitted
by biting midges as well. This introduces the virus into a new environment where measures have to be taken to monitor and
prevent the disease, and little is known about the behavior of the vector in the presence of host animals. This paper presents an
analysis of field study data for biting midges in the presence of sheep, using recently developed analytical techniques for spatiotemporal
analysis. The result suggest how one can monitor diseases like Bluetongue and Schmallenberg virus locally around
host animals by monitoring the vector, and estimates the relative disease pressure under varying meteorological conditions.
This work is joint with Carsten Kirkeby and Rene Bodker.

Biography

Anders Stockmarr completed his PhD in 1996 at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. He has since worked with both theoretical and applied statistics, in
particular, but not exclusively, in a biological setting, including human biology, plant biology and veterinary biology and epidemiology. He now serves as a senior
researcher at the Technical University of Denmark in Lyngby, Denmark. He is the author of more than 40 scientific journal papers, published in a wide range of
journals that covers a broad range of science disciplines.

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