Wild boar in a human-dominated landscape: implications for disease transmission
Two recent studies of the UK’s largest wild boar population have revealed how they use their habitat and how frequently they visit livestock farms. This information is being modelled to inform the prevention and management of important infectious diseases such as African Swine Fever (which has not yet reached the UK but is present in mainland Europe). The studies were conducted by Sonny Bacigalupo - who recently obtained his PhD at 黑料社 and who now works at APHA – along with Julian Drewe and Ruby Chang at 黑料社, and colleagues at the Pirbright Institute, and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
You can read the papers here: