Abstract

The outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is a public health emergency that turns the year 2020–2021 into annus horribilis for millions of people across international boundaries. The interspecies transmission of this zoonotic virus and mutated variants are aided by exposure dynamics of infected aerosols, fomites and intermediate reservoirs. The spike in the first, second and third waves of coronavirus confirms that herd immunity is not yet reached and everyone including livestock is still vulnerable to the infection. Of serious concern are the communitarian nature of agrarians in the livestock sector, aerogenous spread of the virus and attendant cytocidal effect in permissive cells following activation of pathogen recognition receptors, replication cycles, virulent mutations, seasonal spike in infection rates, flurry of reinfections and excess mortalities that can affect animal welfare and food security. As the capacity to either resist or be susceptible to infection is influenced by numerous factors, identifying coronavirus-associated variants and correlating exposure dynamics with viral aerosols, spirometry indices, comorbidities, susceptible blood types, cellular miRNA binding sites and multisystem inflammatory syndrome remains a challenge where the lethal zoonotic infections are prevalent in the livestock industry, being the hub of dairy, fur, meat and egg production. This review provides insights into the complexity of the disease burden and recommends precision smart-farming models for upscaling biosecurity measures and adoption of digitalised technologies (robotic drones) powered by multiparametric sensors and radio modem systems for real-time tracking of infectious strains in the agro-environment and managing the transition into the new-normal realities in the livestock industry.

Highlights

  • Of pertinent concern is the severe impact of time-varying exposure of livestock and personnel involved in the food chain to the highly infectious severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-CoV-2

  • Apart from omics tools for syndromic detection, there is no evidence of multiple pleiotropic expressions, multiplicity of infection, autoimmune mechanisms and blood typing markers coding for susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 or its mutated strains across avian, bovine, ovine, porcine or semiaquatic breeds and neonates

  • Another worrisome issue for the livestock sector is the potential of a wide range of mammalian and avian species being natural reservoirs for different strains of infectious zoonotic diseases such as coronavirus with its highly transmissible variants

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Summary

Farooque and Farhat Abbas

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Material Science and Innovation Modelling (MaSIM) Research Focus Area, Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, North-West University, Private Bag X2046, Mmabatho 2735, South Africa

Introduction
Herbivory and Intricacies of Exposure Dynamics
Justification for the Review
A compendium of environmental variables impact animal welfare farming
Comorbidity of Coronavirus Infections across Species
Pyrogenicity and Vital Signs of COVID-19 Infection
Endocytosis of Coronaviruses
Viral and Host Receptor Interaction
Viral Tropism and Immunogenicity of Coronaviruses
Evolution and Mutability of SARS-CoV-2
Exposure Dynamics and Organ Functionality
Blood Types and Susceptibility to Coronavirus Variants
Triage
Herd Immunity Versus Eco-Exposure to Viral Infections
Biosensing and Smart Precision Farming Models in COVID-19 Era
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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