WILDbase: towards a common database to improve wildlife disease surveillance in Europe

Author:

de Cock Marieke P12ORCID,Baede Valérie O2ORCID,Wijburg Sara R2ORCID,Burt Sara A3,van Tiel Robert FNA3,Wiskerke Kim K3,van der Post Jens RJ3,van der Poel Wim HM41,Sprong Hein2ORCID,Maas Miriam2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Wageningen University and Research, Quantitative Veterinary Epidemiology, Wageningen, The Netherlands

2. National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Centre for Infectious Disease Control, Bilthoven, The Netherlands

3. Utrecht University, Institute for Risk Assessment Science (IRAS), Utrecht, The Netherlands

4. Wageningen Bioveterinary Research, Lelystad, The Netherlands

Abstract

Background To be better prepared for emerging wildlife-borne zoonoses, we need to strengthen wildlife disease surveillance. Aim The aim of this study was to create a topical overview of zoonotic pathogens in wildlife species to identify knowledge gaps and opportunities for improvement of wildlife disease surveillance. Methods We created a database, which is based on a systematic literature review in Embase focused on zoonotic pathogens in 10 common urban wildlife mammals in Europe, namely brown rats, house mice, wood mice, common voles, red squirrels, European rabbits, European hedgehogs, European moles, stone martens and red foxes. In total, we retrieved 6,305 unique articles of which 882 were included. Results In total, 186 zoonotic pathogen species were described, including 90 bacteria, 42 helminths, 19 protozoa, 22 viruses and 15 fungi. Most of these pathogens were only studied in one single animal species. Even considering that some pathogens are relatively species-specific, many European countries have no (accessible) data on zoonotic pathogens in these relevant animal species. We used the Netherlands as an example to show how this database can be used by other countries to identify wildlife disease surveillance gaps on a national level. Only 4% of all potential host–pathogen combinations have been studied in the Netherlands. Conclusions This database comprises a comprehensive overview that can guide future research on wildlife-borne zoonotic diseases both on a European and national scale. Sharing and expanding this database provides a solid starting point for future European-wide collaborations to improve wildlife disease surveillance.

Publisher

European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC)

Reference43 articles.

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