Recent review: Sanitary Emergencies at the Wild/Domestic Caprines Interface in Europe
by Luca Rossi, Paolo Tizzani, Luisa Rambozzi, Barbara Moroni and Pier Giuseppe Meneguz
[relayed from Animals, 9(11), 922] Even if it is an important achievement from a biodiversity conservation perspective, the documented increase in abundance of the four native European wild Caprinae (Rupicapra rupicapra, R. pyrenaica, Capra ibex, C. pyrenaica) can also be a matter of concern, since tighter and more frequent contact with sympatric livestock implies a greater risk of transmission of emerging and re-emerging pathogens.
This article reviews the main transmissible diseases that, in a European scenario, are of greater significance from a conservation perspective. Epidemics causing major demographic downturns in wild Caprinae populations during recent decades were often triggered by pathogens transmitted at the livestock/wildlife interface