Abstract

Economic losses and risks to productivity posed by classical swine fever (CSF) have increased in many countries together with pig population density and with increasingly intensive production systems. Greater efforts to control and eventually eradicate CSF have been prompted by the appearance of atypical forms of the disease, as well as by the recrudescence of infection in formerly disease-free countries. The spread of African swine fever (ASF) to formerly uninfected regions calls for vigilance and action against both diseases.

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