Investigation of PRRS Virus Infection in Hungarian Wild Boar Populations during Its Eradication from Domestic Pig Herds

Author:

Bálint Ádám1ORCID,Csányi Sándor2ORCID,Nemes Imre3,Bijl Hanna2ORCID,Szabó István4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Veterinary Diagnostic Directorate, National Food Chain Safety Office, H-1143 Budapest, Hungary

2. Department of Wildlife Biology and Management, Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences, H-2100 Gödöllő, Hungary

3. National Food Chain Safety Office, H-1024 Budapest, Hungary

4. National PRRS Eradication Committee, H-1021 Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome (PRRS) significantly impacts the pig farming industry globally, leading to economic losses due to reduced productivity. This study focuses on assessing the presence and impact of PRRS within Hungarian wild boar populations amidst efforts to eradicate the virus from domestic pig herds. We used a combination of serological and virological tests on samples collected from wild boars across Hungary to evaluate the prevalence of PRRS virus and its potential transmission risks to domestic pigs. Our findings reveal a low seropositivity rate in wild boars, suggesting a minimal role of wild boars in the transmission of PRRS to domestic pig populations. Moreover, no relationship was found between domestic pig and wild boar densities, emphasizing the limited interaction and consequent risk of disease spread between these populations. We confirm the effectiveness of Hungary’s PRRS eradication measures among domestic herds and highlight the negligible risk posed by wild boars in re-introducing the PRRS virus.

Funder

National Laboratory for Infectious Animal Diseases, Antimicrobial Resistance, Veterinary Public Health and Food Chain Safety

National Food Chain Safety Office

Doctoral Student Scholarship Program of the Cooperative Doctoral Program of the Ministry of Innovation and Technology financed from the National Research, Development, and Innovation Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference33 articles.

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4. (2023, September 05). Scottish PRRS Elimination Project 2019 Innovative Farmers. Available online: https://innovativefarmers.org/field-lab?id=f0ea179b-5ddc-e811-816f-05056ad0bd4.

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