Abstract

African swine fever remains an important pig disease globally in view of its rapid spread, economic impacts and food implications, with no option of vaccination or treatment. The Southern Highlands zone of Tanzania, an important pig-producing hub in East Africa, is endemic with African swine fever (ASF). From approximately the year 2010, the recurrence of outbreaks has been observed and it has now become a predictable pattern. We conducted exploratory participatory epidemiology and participatory disease surveillance in the Southern Highlands to understand the pig sector and the drivers and facilitators of infections, risk factors and dynamics of ASF in this important pig-producing area. Pigs continue to play a major role in rural livelihoods in the Southern Highlands and pork is a major animal protein source. Outbreaks of diseases, particularly ASF, have continued to militate against the scaling up of pig operations in the Southern Highlands. Intra- and inter-district and trans-border transnational outbreaks of ASF, the most common disease in the Southern Highlands, continue to occur. Trade and marketing systems, management systems, and lack of biosecurity, as well as anthropogenic (human) issues, animals and fomites, were identified as risk factors and facilitators of ASF infection. Changes in human behavior and communication in trade and marketing systems in the value chain, biosecurity and pig management practices are warranted. Relevant training must be implemented alongside the launch of the national ASF control strategy for Tanzania, which already established a roadmap for combating ASF in Tanzania. The high-risk points (slaughter slabs, border areas, and farms with poor biosecurity) and high-risk period (November–March) along the pig value chain must be targeted as critical control points for interventions in order to reduce the burden of infection.

Highlights

  • African swine fever (ASF) has become a disease of great concern, with threats to international trade and food security, especially with the recent expansion of geographical territories to cover previously unreached parts of the world [1,2]

  • We interviewed a total of 95 individual stakeholders in 11 focus group discussions (FGDs) and 37 In-depth interviews (IDIs), covering six villages and a public slaughter facility for pigs in two districts of Mbeya and Chunya

  • While five of the communities have experienced previous outbreaks of ASF (2016–2017), one had an ongoing outbreaks (November 2019) and only one of the communities has never experienced outbreaks of ASF based on history and collected anecdotal evidence

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Summary

Introduction

African swine fever (ASF) has become a disease of great concern, with threats to international trade and food security, especially with the recent expansion of geographical territories to cover previously unreached parts of the world [1,2]. In 2019 alone, naïve ASF-free countries of. Cambodia, Mongolia, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the Republic of Korea, Lao. People’s Democratic Republic, Indonesia, Myanmar, Philippines, Timor-Leste and Vietnam in Asia and newer territories in Europe have been infected [2,3] and countries that are free are at constant threat of infection [1,2,3,4]. ASF can manifest in four epidemiological cycles including (1) the ancient tick bite sylvatic cycle, (2) the tick–pig cycle, (3) the domestic (pig–pig) cycle, and (4) the wild boar–habitat cycle [1,2,3,4,5,6]. The European wild boar (Sus scrofa) and feral pigs are very susceptible to ASF like the domestic pigs but the Warthog (Phacochoerus africanus), the red river hog (Potamochoerus porcus) and bushpig (Potamochoerus larvatus) usually remain asymptomatic [2,3,4,5,6]

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