Agriculture: Intensive farming increases risk of epidemics
Overuse
of antibiotics, high animal numbers and low genetic diversity caused by
intensive farming techniques increase the likelihood of pathogens becoming a
major public health risk, according to new research led by UK scientists.
An
international team of researchers led by the Universities of Bath and
Sheffield, investigated the evolution of Campylobacter jejuni, a bacterium
carried by cattle which is the leading cause of gastroenteritis in high income
countries.
Campylobacter
facts :
- Causes bloody diarrhea in humans
- Transferred to humans from eating
contaminated meat and poultry
- Although not as dangerous as typhoid, cholera
or E.coli, it causes serious illness in patients with
underlying health issues and can cause lasting damage.
- Around 1 in 7 people suffer from an infection
at some point in their life
- Causes three times more cases than E.coli,
Salmonella and listeria combined
- Carried in the faeces of chickens, pigs,
cattle and wild animals
- Campylobacter is estimated to be present in
the faeces of 20% cattle worldwide
- The bug is very resistant to antibiotics due
to their use in farming
The
researchers, publishing in the journal Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, studied the genetic evolution of the pathogen and
found that cattle-specific strains of the bacterium emerged at the same time as
a dramatic rise in cattle numbers in the 20th Century.
The
authors of the study suggest that changes in cattle diet, anatomy and
physiology triggered gene transfer between general and cattle-specific strains
with significant gene gain and loss. This helped the bacterium to cross the
species barrier and infect humans, triggering a major public health problem.
Combine
this with the increased movement of animals globally, intensive farming
practices have provided the perfect environment in which to spread globally
through trade networks.
Professor
Sam Sheppard from the Milner Centre for Evolution at the University of Bath,
said: "There are an estimated 1.5 billion cattle on Earth, each producing
around 30 kg of manure each day; if roughly 20 per cent of these are carrying
Campylobacter, that amounts to a huge potential public health risk.
"Over
the past few decades, there have been several viruses and pathogenic bacteria
that have switched species from wild animals to humans: HIV started in monkeys;
H5N1 came from birds; now Covid-19 is suspected to have come from bats.
"Our
work shows that environmental change and increased contact with farm animals
has caused bacterial infections to cross over to humans too.
"I
think this is a wake-up call to be more responsible about farming methods, so we
can reduce the risk of outbreaks of problematic pathogens in the future."
Professor
Dave Kelly from the Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology at the
University of Sheffield said: "Human pathogens carried in animals are an
increasing threat and our findings highlight how their adaptability can allow
them to switch hosts and exploit intensive farming practices."
The
researchers hope that their study can help scientists predict potential
problems in the future so they can be prevented before they turn into another
epidemic.
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