Baselight
Sign In
usgov

Data From: Using Zoos As Sentinels For Re-emerging Arboviruses: Vector Surveillance During An Outbreak Of Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease At The Minnesota Zoo

Verified Source
US Government

@usgov.department_of_agriculture_data_from_using_zoos_as_sent_72f5691c

Loading...
Loading...

Department of Agriculture

Dataset Description

Vector-borne disease prevalence is increasing at a time when surveillance capacity in the United States is decreasing. One way to address this surveillance deficiency is to utilize established infrastructure, such as zoological parks, to investigate animal disease outbreaks and improve our epidemiological understanding of vector-borne pathogens. During fall 2020, an outbreak of epizootic hemorrhagic disease (EHD) at the Minnesota Zoo resulted in morbidity and seroconversion of several collection animals. In response to this outbreak, insect surveillance was conducted, and the collected insects were tested for the presence of epizootic hemorrhagic disease virus (EHDV) by RT-qPCR to better understand the local transmitting vector populations responsible for the outbreak. Six pools of Culicoides biting midges were positive for EHDV, including three pools of Culicoides sonorensis , two pools of Culicoides variipennis , and a pool of degraded C. variipennis complex midges. All three endemic serotypes of EHDV (1, 2, and 6) were detected in both animals and midge pools from the premises. Despite this outbreak, no EHDV cases had been reported in wild animals near the zoo. This highlights the importance and utility of using animal holding facilities, such as zoos, as sentinels to better understand the spatio-temporal dynamics of pathogen transmission.
Organization: Department of Agriculture
Organization URL: https://catalog.data.gov/organization/usda
Last updated: 2025-11-21
Tags: Culicoides, Culicoides sonorensis, Culicoides variipennis, Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease Virus, Surveillance, Zoo


Related Datasets

Share link

Anyone who has the link will be able to view this.