11 results on '"Daniele Denurra"'
Search Results
2. Pathogen Prevalence in Cetaceans Stranded along the Italian Coastline between 2015 and 2020
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Carla Grattarola, Guido Pietroluongo, Donatella Belluscio, Enrica Berio, Cristina Canonico, Cinzia Centelleghe, Cristiano Cocumelli, Silvia Crotti, Daniele Denurra, Alessandra Di Donato, Gabriella Di Francesco, Giovanni Di Guardo, Fabio Di Nocera, Ludovica Di Renzo, Stefano Gavaudan, Federica Giorda, Giuseppe Lucifora, Leonardo Marino, Federica Marcer, Letizia Marsili, Sergio Migliore, Ilaria Pascucci, Antonio Petrella, Antonio Pintore, Roberto Puleio, Silva Rubini, Giuliana Terracciano, Anna Toffan, Sandro Mazzariol, and Cristina Casalone
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cetaceans ,pathogens ,strandings ,Italy ,Medicine - Abstract
The monitoring of stranded marine mammals represents a strategic method to assess their health, conservation status, and ecological role in the marine ecosystem. Networks worldwide track stranding events for the passive monitoring of mortality patterns, emerging and reemerging pathogens, climate change, and environmental degradation from a One Health perspective. This study summarizes pathogen prevalence data from the Italian Stranding Network (ISN) derived from post-mortem investigations on cetaceans found dead stranded along the Italian coastline between 2015 and 2020. The decomposition of the carcasses and logistics limited the post-mortem examination to 585 individuals, out of 1236 single-stranding reports. The most relevant pathogens identified were Cetacean Morbillivirus, Herpesvirus, Brucella spp., and Toxoplasma gondii, whose roles as environmental stressors are well known, despite their real impact still needing to be investigated in depth. Statistical analysis showed that age and sex seem to be positively related to the presence of pathogens. This study represents the first step in harmonizing post-mortem investigations, which is crucial for evidence-based conservation efforts. Implementing diagnostic and forensic frameworks could offer an indirect insight into the systematic monitoring of diseases to improve the identification of regional and temporal hotspots in which to target specific mitigation, management, and conservation strategies.
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- 2024
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3. Passive Surveillance as a Key Tool for African Swine Fever Eradication in Wild Boar: A Protocol to Find Carcasses Tested and Validated in the Mediterranean Island of Sardinia
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Elisabetta Coradduzza, Federica Loi, Francesca Porcu, Daniela Mandas, Fabio Secci, Marco Efisio Pisanu, Cinzia Pasini, Carlo Zuddas, Marcella Cherchi, Daniele Denurra, Ennio Bandino, Antonio Pintore, Vittorio Guberti, and Stefano Cappai
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African swine fever ,passive surveillance ,carcasses ,eradication ,mobile app ,freedom from animal disease ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
African swine fever (ASF) is one of the most important and serious contagious hemorrhagic viral diseases affecting domestic pigs and wild boar and is associated with high mortality rates while also having an extensive sanitary and socioeconomic impact on the international trade of animal and swine products. The early detection of the disease is often hampered by inadequate surveillance. Among the surveillance strategies used, passive surveillance of wild boars is considered the most effective method for controlling the African swine fever virus (ASFV). Otherwise, the design of a sufficiently sensitive ASF surveillance system requires a solid understanding of the epidemiology related to the local eco-social context, especially in the absence of virus detection. Even if the number of carcasses needed to demonstrate ASF eradication has been established, the scientific context lacks detail compared to protocols applied in the active search for wild boar carcasses. The aim of this study was to describe the protocol applied in the active search for carcasses, providing detailed information on the number of people and dogs as well as the amount of time and space used within the Mediterranean area. Using a specific tool developed to record, trace, and share field data (the GAIA observer app), a total of 33 active searches for wild boar carcasses were organized during 2021–2023. Most of these searches were planned to find carcasses that had previously been reported by hunters. A total of 24 carcasses were found, with only 2 carcasses not previously reported. The final protocol applied involved four people, with an average speed of 1.5 km/h. When a carcass had been previously reported, about 2 km of distance had to be covered in about 1.5 h to find the carcass, and even less time was spent when a dog (untrained) was present. In conclusion, it can be stated that, when searching for carcasses, solid collaboration with local hunters or other forest visitors is necessary to ensure carcasses are reported. The process involves small groups of experts actively searching for carcasses, possibly with the use of hunting dogs without special training. The data presented could be of valid support for those countries characterized by Mediterranean vegetation that are faced with the need to plan active carcass searches.
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- 2024
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4. Changes in Estimating the Wild Boar Carcasses Sampling Effort: Applying the EFSA ASF Exit Strategy by Means of the WBC-Counter Tool
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Stefano Cappai, Ileana Baldi, Pietro Desini, Antonio Pintore, Daniele Denurra, Marcella Cherchi, Sandro Rolesu, Daniela Mandas, Giulia Franzoni, Mariangela Stefania Fiori, Annalisa Oggiano, Francesco Feliziani, Vittorio Guberti, and Federica Loi
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African swine fever ,freedom of infection ,passive surveillance ,risk factor ,wild boar ,carcasses ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
African swine fever (ASF) is a devastating disease, resulting in the high mortality of domestic and wild pigs, spreading quickly around the world. Ensuring the prevention and early detection of the disease is even more crucial given the absence of licensed vaccines. As suggested by the European Commission, those countries which intend to provide evidence of freedom need to speed up passive surveillance of their wild boar populations. If this kind of surveillance is well-regulated in domestic pig farms, the country-specific activities to be put in place for wild populations need to be set based on wild boar density, hunting bags, the environment, and financial resources. Following the indications of the official EFSA opinion 2021, a practical interpretation of the strategy was implemented based on the failure probabilities of wrongly declaring the freedom of an area even if the disease is still present but undetected. This work aimed at providing a valid, applicative example of an exit strategy based on two different approaches: the first uses the wild boar density to estimate the number of carcasses need to complete the exit strategy, while the second estimates it from the number of wild boar hunted and tested. A practical free access tool, named WBC-Counter, was developed to automatically calculate the number of needed carcasses. The practical example was developed using the ASF data from Sardinia (Italian island). Sardinia is ASF endemic from 43 years, but the last ASFV detection dates back to 2019. The island is under consideration for ASF eradication declaration. The subsequent results provide a practical example for other countries in approaching the EFSA exit strategy in the best choices for its on-field application.
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- 2022
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5. Retrospective spatial analysis for African swine fever in endemic areas to assess interactions between susceptible host populations.
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Jaime Bosch, Jose A Barasona, Estefanía Cadenas-Fernández, Cristina Jurado, Antonio Pintore, Daniele Denurra, Marcella Cherchi, Joaquín Vicente, and Jose M Sánchez-Vizcaíno
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
African Swine Fever (ASF) is one of the most complex and significant diseases from a sanitary-economic perspective currently affecting the world's swine-farming industry. ASF has been endemic in Sardinia (Italy) since 1978, and several control and eradication programmes have met with limited success. In this traditional ASF endemic area, there are three susceptible host populations for this virus sharing the same habitat: wild boar, farmed domestic pigs and non-registered free-ranging pigs (known as "brado" animals). The main goal of this study was to determine and predict fine-scale spatial interactions of this multi-host system in relation to the epidemiology of ASF in the main endemic area of Sardinia, Montes-Orgosolo. To this end, simultaneous monitoring of GPS-GSM collared wild boar and free-ranging pigs sightings were performed to predict interaction indexes through latent selection difference functions with environmental, human and farming factors. Regarding epidemiological assessment, the spatial inter-specific interaction indexes obtained here were used to correlate ASF notifications in wild boar and domestic pig farms. Daily movement patterns, home ranges (between 120.7 and 2,622.8 ha) and resource selection of wild boar were obtained for the first time on the island. Overall, our prediction model showed the highest spatial interactions between wild boar and free-ranging pigs in areas close to pig farms. A spatially explicit model was obtained to map inter-specific interaction over the complete ASF-endemic area of the island. Our approach to monitoring interaction indexes may help explain the occurrence of ASF notifications in wild boar and domestic pigs on a fine-spatial scale. These results support the recent and effective eradication measures taken in Sardinia. In addition, this methodology could be extrapolated to apply in the current epidemiological scenarios of ASF in Eurasia, where exist multi-host systems involving free-ranging pigs and wild boar.
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- 2020
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6. Free-Ranging Pig and Wild Boar Interactions in an Endemic Area of African Swine Fever
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Estefanía Cadenas-Fernández, Jose M. Sánchez-Vizcaíno, Antonio Pintore, Daniele Denurra, Marcella Cherchi, Cristina Jurado, Joaquín Vicente, and Jose A. Barasona
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free-ranging pig ,wild boar ,camera trapping ,interactions ,critical time window ,African swine fever ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
African swine fever virus (ASFV) is spreading throughout Eurasia and there is no vaccine nor treatment available, so the control is based on the implementation of strict sanitary measures. These measures include depopulation of infected and in-contact animals and export restrictions, which can lead to important economic losses, making currently African swine fever (ASF) the greatest threat to the global swine industry. ASF has been endemic on the island of Sardinia since 1978, the longest persistence of anywhere in Eurasia. In Sardinia, eradication programs have failed, in large part due to the lack of farm professionalism, the high density of wild boar and the presence of non-registered domestic pigs (free-ranging pigs). In order to clarify how the virus is transmitted from domestic to wild swine, we examined the interaction between free-ranging pigs and wild boar in an ASF-endemic area of Sardinia. To this end, a field study was carried out on direct and indirect interactions, using monitoring by camera trapping in different areas and risk points. Critical time windows (CTWs) for the virus to survive in the environment (long window) and remain infectious (short window) were estimated, and based on these, the number of indirect interactions were determined. Free-ranging pigs indirectly interacted often with wild boar (long window = 6.47 interactions/day, short window = 1.31 interactions/day) and these interactions (long window) were mainly at water sources. They also directly interacted 0.37 times per day, especially between 14:00 and 21:00 h, which is much higher than for other interspecific interactions observed in Mediterranean scenarios. The highly frequent interactions at this interspecific interface may help explain the more than four-decade-long endemicity of ASF on the island. Supporting that free-ranging pigs can act as a bridge to transmit ASFV between wild boar and registered domestic pigs. This study contributes broadly to improving the knowledge on the estimation of frequencies of direct and indirect interactions between wild and free-ranging domestic swine. As well as supporting the importance of the analysis of interspecific interactions in shared infectious diseases, especially for guiding disease management. Finally, this work illustrates the power of the camera-trapping method for analyzing interspecific interfaces.
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- 2019
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7. Mediterranean Fin Whales (Balaenoptera physalus) Threatened by Dolphin MorbilliVirus
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Sandro Mazzariol, Cinzia Centelleghe, Giorgia Beffagna, Michele Povinelli, Giuliana Terracciano, Cristiano Cocumelli, Antonio Pintore, Daniele Denurra, Cristina Casalone, Alessandra Pautasso, Cristina Esmeralda Di Francesco, and Giovanni Di Guardo
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Morbillivirus ,dolphin morbillivirus ,Balaenoptera physalus ,viruses ,Mediterranean Sea ,fin whales ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
During 2011–2013, dolphin morbillivirus was molecularly identified in 4 stranded fin whales from the Mediterranean Sea. Nucleoprotein, phosphoprotein, and hemagglutinin gene sequences of the identified strain were highly homologous with those of a morbillivirus that caused a 2006–2007 epidemic in the Mediterranean. Dolphin morbillivirus represents a serious threat for fin whales.
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- 2016
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8. Isolation of
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Ivana, Piredda, Bruna, Palmas, Malgorzata, Noworol, Sebastiana, Tola, Carla, Longheu, Cristina, Bertasio, Erika, Scaltriti, Daniele, Denurra, Marcella, Cherchi, Mathieu, Picardeau, Maria B, Boniotti, and Maria N, Ponti
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Bottle-Nosed Dolphin ,Mediterranean Sea ,Animals ,Leptospirosis ,Leptospira interrogans - Abstract
The pathogenic
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- 2020
9. Isolation of Leptospira interrogans from a Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) in the Mediterranean Sea
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Erika Scaltriti, Maria Beatrice Boniotti, Cristina Bertasio, Marcella Cherchi, Sebastiana Tola, Carla Longheu, Ivana Piredda, Maria Nicoletta Ponti, Daniele Denurra, Bruna Palmas, Malgorzata Noworol, and Mathieu Picardeau
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Ecology ,biology ,040301 veterinary sciences ,animal diseases ,030231 tropical medicine ,Zoology ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,biology.organism_classification ,Bottlenose dolphin ,Isolation (microbiology) ,0403 veterinary science ,Leptospira species ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mediterranean sea ,bacteria ,Leptospira interrogans serovar pomona ,Leptospira interrogans ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The pathogenic Leptospira species are very widespread in nature, persisting in the renal tubules of many domestic and wild animal reservoirs. We report the isolation of Leptospira interrogans serovar Pomona in a bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) stranded along the coast of Sardinia, Italy, in 2016.
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- 2020
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10. Novel dolphin morbillivirus (DMV) outbreak among Mediterranean striped dolphins Stenella coeruleoalba in Italian waters
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A. Carbone, Cristina Casalone, Sandro Mazzariol, Carla Grattarola, Daniele Denurra, Loretta Masoero, Giuseppe Lucifora, Antonio Petrella, Barbara Iulini, M. Goria, Katia Varello, G. Di Guardo, Giuseppa Purpari, Walter Mignone, Antonio Pintore, Alessandra Pautasso, Giovanna Fusco, Federica Giorda, Simone Peletto, Roberto Puleio, A. Cersini, and Francesco Scholl
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Mediterranean climate ,Unusual mortality event ,Subacute phase ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Evolution ,Dolphins ,Population ,RT-PCR ,Zoology ,Italian Sea ,Morbillivirus ,Striped dolphins ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Aquatic Science ,Stenella coeruleoalba ,Disease Outbreaks ,0403 veterinary science ,Dolphin Morbillivirus ,Mediterranean sea ,Stenella ,Behavior and Systematics ,biology.animal ,Mediterranean Sea ,Animals ,education ,Dolphin Morbillivirus, Striped dolphin, Stenella coeruleoalba, Mediterranean Sea, Italy ,Striped dolphin ,Phylogeny ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Ecology ,Outbreak ,Aquatic animal ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,italian sea ,morbillivirus ,rt-pcr ,striped dolphins ,unusual mortality event ,animals ,disease outbreaks ,Italy ,phylogeny ,spain ,dolphins ,morbillivirus infections ,stenella ,Spain ,040102 fisheries ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Morbillivirus Infections - Abstract
An unusual mortality event (UME) of striped dolphins Stenella coeruleoalba occurred in the period July to December 2016 along the Italian Ionian coastline. We conducted a complete postmortem examination on 28 specimens and detected dolphin morbillivirus (DMV), by means of biomolecular analyses, in the target tissues of 17 animals. Unlike previous outbreaks occurring in the Mediterranean Sea in 2011 and 2013, we observed typical pathological changes suggestive of morbilliviral infection in an acute/subacute phase and immunohistochemical reactivity. The same findings were observed in 13 other specimens beached along the Italian coastline during 2016 with no temporal and geographical relationship with the ongoing epidemic outbreak. Molecular characterization and phylogenetic analysis showed that DMV sequences detected in Italy in 2016 clustered with those identified in Portugal and Galicia (Spain), representing a novel DMV strain of Atlantic origin which entered the Mediterranean Sea and affected a naive striped dolphin population. DMV sequences detected in the previous Mediterranean outbreaks exhibited a marked genetic relatedness and diverged from those detected in cetaceans stranded along the Galician and Portuguese coasts since 2007.
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- 2019
11. Mediterranean Fin Whales (Balaenoptera physalus) Threatened by Dolphin MorbilliVirus
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Cristina Casalone, Antonio Pintore, Giovanni Di Guardo, Alessandra Pautasso, Daniele Denurra, Giorgia Beffagna, Cristiano Cocumelli, Sandro Mazzariol, Michele Povinelli, Giuliana Terracciano, Cinzia Centelleghe, and Cristina Esmeralda Di Francesco
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Mediterranean climate ,Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Epidemiology ,animal diseases ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Hemagglutinins, Viral ,lcsh:Medicine ,Genome, Viral ,Biology ,Balaenoptera physalus ,Mediterranean Sea ,Mediterranean fin whales ,Morbillivirus ,dolphin morbillivirus ,fin whales ,hemagglutinin gene ,morbillivirus infection ,nucleoprotein gene ,outbreak ,phosphoprotein gene ,viruses ,Animal Diseases ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Mediterranean sea ,Animals ,Base sequence ,Morbillivirus Infections ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Balaenoptera ,Base Sequence ,Fin Whale ,Dolphin Morbillivirus, Morbillivirus, Fin whale, Balaenoptera physalus, Mediterranean Sea ,lcsh:R ,Dispatch ,biology.organism_classification ,Fin Whales ,Fishery ,Infectious Diseases ,Mediterranean Fin Whales (Balaenoptera physalus) Threatened by Dolphin Morbillivirus ,Threatened species ,human activities - Abstract
During 2011-2013, dolphin morbillivirus was molecularly identified in 4 stranded fin whales from the Mediterranean Sea. Nucleoprotein, phosphoprotein, and hemagglutinin gene sequences of the identified strain were highly homologous with those of a morbillivirus that caused a 2006-2007 epidemic in the Mediterranean. Dolphin morbillivirus represents a serious threat for fin whales.
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- 2016
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