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. 2017 Feb 24;84(1):e1-e7.
doi: 10.4102/ojvr.v84i1.1306.

History of Newcastle disease in South Africa

Affiliations

History of Newcastle disease in South Africa

Celia Abolnik. Onderstepoort J Vet Res. .

Abstract

Poultry production in South Africa, a so-called developing country, may be seen as a gradient between two extremes with highly integrated commercial enterprises with world-class facilities on one hand and unimproved rural chickens kept by households and subsistence farmers on the other. Although vaccination against Newcastle disease is widely applied to control this devastating infection, epizootics continue to occur. Since the first official diagnosis in 1945, through the sporadic outbreaks of the 1950s and early 1960s, to serious epizootics caused by genotype VIII (late 1960s-2000), genotype VIIb (1993-1999), genotype VIId (2003-2012) and most recently genotype VIIh (2013 to present), South Africa's encounters with exotic Newcastle disease follow global trends. Importation - probably illegal - of infected poultry, poultry products or exotic birds and illegal swill dumping are likely routes of entry. Once the commercial sector is affected, the disease spreads rapidly within the region via transportation routes. Each outbreak genotype persisted for about a decade and displaced its predecessor.

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Conflict of interest statement

The author declares that she has no financial or personal relationships that may have inappropriately influenced her in writing this article.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Timeline of Newcastle disease virus outbreaks in South Africa since the late 1960s, which were caused by successive outbreaks of genotypes VIII, VIIb, VIId and VIIh, respectively.

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