Long-term wildlife mortality surveillance in northern Congo: a model for the detection of Ebola virus disease epizootics

Author:

Kuisma Eeva1ORCID,Olson Sarah H.2ORCID,Cameron Kenneth N.2,Reed Patricia E.2,Karesh William B.3,Ondzie Alain I.1,Akongo Marc-Joël1,Kaba Serge D.1,Fischer Robert J.4,Seifert Stephanie N.4,Muñoz-Fontela César5,Becker-Ziaja Beate6,Escudero-Pérez Beatriz5,Goma-Nkoua Cynthia7ORCID,Munster Vincent J.4,Mombouli Jean-Vivien7

Affiliation:

1. Wildlife Conservation Society, Wildlife Health Program, 151 Avenue du General de Gaulle, BP14537 Brazzaville, Republic of Congo

2. Wildlife Conservation Society, Wildlife Health Program, 2300 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, New York, NY 10460, USA

3. Health and Policy, EcoHealth Alliance, 460 West 34th Street, New York, NY 10001, USA

4. Laboratory of Virology, Virus Ecology Unit, Division of Intramural Research, National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, 903s 4th street, Hamilton, MT, USA

5. Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine and German Center for Infection Research DZIF, Bernhard Nocht Strasse 74, 20359 Hamburg, Germany

6. Robert Koch-Institut, Seestraße 10, 13353 Berlin, Germany

7. Service d'Epidémiologie Moléculaire, Laboratoire National de Santé Publique, Avenue du General de Gaulle, BP120 Brazzaville, Republic of Congo

Abstract

Ebolavirus (EBOV) has caused disease outbreaks taking thousands of lives, costing billions of dollars in control efforts and threatening great ape populations. EBOV ecology is not fully understood but infected wildlife and consumption of animal carcasses have been linked to human outbreaks, especially in the Congo Basin. Partnering with the Congolese Ministry of Health, we conducted wildlife mortality surveillance and educational outreach in the northern Republic of Congo (RoC). Designed for EBOV detection and to alert public health authorities, we established a low-cost wildlife mortality reporting network covering 50 000 km 2 . Simultaneously, we delivered educational outreach promoting behavioural change to over 6600 people in rural northern RoC. We achieved specimen collection by training project staff on a safe sampling protocol and equipping geographically distributed bases with sampling kits. We established in-country diagnostics for EBOV testing, reducing diagnostic turnaround time to 3 days and demonstrated the absence of EBOV in 58 carcasses. Central Africa remains a high-risk EBOV region, but RoC, home to the largest remaining populations of great apes, has not had an epidemic since 2005. This effort continues to function as an untested early warning system in RoC, where people and great apes have died from past Ebola virus disease outbreaks. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Dynamic and integrative approaches to understanding pathogen spillover’.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

ARCUS foundation

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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