Stochastic modeling of bovine tuberculosis dynamics in white-tailed deer.

Stochastic modeling of bovine tuberculosis dynamics in white-tailed deer.

Publication date: Nov 13, 2025

Mycobacterium bovis, the causative agent of bovine tuberculosis (bTB), poses an economic risk to the United States (U. S.) cattle industry. Although management has reduced herd-level prevalence, repeated spillback from wildlife reservoirs, such as white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), remains a major barrier to eradication. Here, we developed a stochastic simulation that incorporates seasonal changes in deer abundance (birth pulses and hunter harvest) and heterogeneity in contact behavior to predict bTB dynamics in wildlife. We then used this framework to identify mechanisms that shape bTB outbreak trajectories and prevalence. Our results indicate that the probability of bTB endemicity depends more on the number of infected animals than herd size and that fadeout was unlikely unless the outbreak failed to take off in the first place. We also observed that rare, but high contact individuals are enough to sustain above average bTB prevalence. Additionally, prevalence estimates using postmortem diagnostics on hunter-harvested animals provides a systematic underestimate of true prevalence, especially when disease prevalence is low. Finally, our results suggest that preventive measures, such as fencing and covered water and feed storage, may be necessary to further decrease bTB prevalence in deer and cattle given the low probability of fadeout in wildlife. Further, although prevalence estimates from hunter harvest may be imperfect, relative changes between years could be used as a tool to identify outbreaks or evaluate intervention effectiveness.

Concepts Keywords
Deer Bovine tuberculosis
Harvest Modeling
Postmortem Stochastic process
Tuberculosis White-tailed deer
Virginianus

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH bovine tuberculosis
drug DRUGBANK Water
disease IDO intervention
disease IDO process

Original Article

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *