Indian Journal of Animal Research

SCOPUSWeb of Science
  • Year: 2017
  • Volume: 51
  • Issue: 2

Foot-and-mouth disease in wildlife population of India

  • Author:
  • M. Rout, S. Subramaniam, B. Das, J.K. Mohapatra, B.B. Dash, A. Sanyal, B. Pattnaik
  • Total Page Count: 3
  • Page Number: 344 to 346

ICAR-Project Directorate on Foot and Mouth Disease, IVRI Campus, Mukteswar-263 138, Nainital, India

Abstract

A total of 41 clinical samples (vesicle/tongue/foot/nasal epithelium) from Indian gaur, deer, spotted deer, nilgai, chowsinga, bison, black buck, elephant, sambar deer were collected in 50% phosphate buffered saline/glycerol medium (pH-7.5) during suspected FMD outbreaks. Supernatants of homogenized clinical samples were used in a serotype differentiating antigen detection ELISA and samples found negative were further subjected to multiplex PCR (mPCR). A total of 3/11 (27.2%) samples from Indian gaur, 2/7 (28.5%) chital deer, 5/5 (100%) nilgai, 2/2 (100%) black buck were found positive for serotype O in antigen detection ELISA. A total of 3 ELISA-negative samples from spotted deer, 2 from bison and 2 from sambar deer were found positive for serotype O in mPCR. The VP1 region-based phylogenetic analysis indicated the involvement of both O/ME-SA/Ind2001 and PanAsia lineage of serotype O in the outbreaks. The wildlife species infected with FMD may pose further threat to the surrounding domestic livestock.

Keywords

Bison, Black buck, Chowsinga, Deer, Elephant, Foot-and-mouth disease, Gaur, Nilgai, Wildlife