Bovine tuberculosis in cattle: reduced risk on wildlife-friendly farms.

Abstract:

:The associations between habitat and other factors that lead to the risk of bovine tuberculosis (bTB) in diary cattle were examined in an unmatched case-control study. Data from 60 herds with recent history of bTB and 60 controls were analysed using logistic regression. The predictors included farmland habitat, topography, indices of badger density and herd size. Information-theoretic approaches were used to identify those predictor variables explaining the greatest variation in cattle herd bTB breakdowns. Reduced risk of bTB was associated with the management of farmland in ways favourable to wildlife conservation, as encouraged by recent (2005) European Common Agricultural Policy reforms.

journal_name

Biol Lett

journal_title

Biology letters

authors

Mathews F,Lovett L,Rushton S,Macdonald DW

doi

10.1098/rsbl.2006.0461

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2006-06-22 00:00:00

pages

271-4

issue

2

eissn

1744-9561

issn

1744-957X

pii

G31482183Q58G616

journal_volume

2

pub_type

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