Volume 17, Issue 4
External scientific report
Open Access

Analysis of wild boar‐domestic pig interface in Europe: preliminary analysis

ENETWILD consortium

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: alpha@efsa.europa.eu

National Institute on Wildlife Research (IREC), University of Castilla‐La Mancha and Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Ciudad Real, Spain

ENETWILD Consortium: www.enetwild.comCorrespondence: E-mail address: alpha@efsa.europa.euSearch for more papers by this author
Javier Fernandez‐Lopez

National Institute on Wildlife Research (IREC), University of Castilla‐La Mancha and Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Ciudad Real, Spain

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Pelayo Acevedo

National Institute on Wildlife Research (IREC), University of Castilla‐La Mancha and Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Ciudad Real, Spain

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José Antonio Blanco‐Aguiar

National Institute on Wildlife Research (IREC), University of Castilla‐La Mancha and Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Ciudad Real, Spain

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Joaquín Vicente

National Institute on Wildlife Research (IREC), University of Castilla‐La Mancha and Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Ciudad Real, Spain

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First published: 08 April 2020
Question number: EFSA‐Q‐2020‐00225
Disclaimer: The present document has been produced and adopted by the bodies identified above as authors. This task has been carried out exclusively by the authors in the context of a contract between the European Food Safety Authority and the authors, awarded following a tender procedure. The present document is published complying with the transparency principle to which the Authority is subject. It may no‐t be considered as an output adopted by the Authority. The European Food Safety Authority reserves its rights, view and position as regards the issues addressed and the conclusions reached in the present document, without prejudice to the rights of the authors.

Abstract

The ENETWILD consortium (www.enetwild.com) aims at defining the spatial interface between wild boar and domestic pigs in Europe, which is essential to evaluate the risk for ASF spread between wild and domestic. This report describes the different sources of data for domestic pigs in Europe and develops a preliminary risk map of possible spatial interaction between both groups. Specific cases from Romania and Spain where reliable data were available were assessed. This modelof the interface was based on the data from Gridded Livestock of the World(GLW) database of FAO, which provides predictions on a 1x1 km scale globally and the wild boar abundance distribution model recently elaborated by ENETWILD consortium (2020).The present available census data of livestock at the European Union level (Eurostat) is restricted to a maximum spatial resolution of NUTS2, remarking the need of developing a framework to collect harmonised data with higher resolution. This will ensure that data can be comparable, validated and used. There is need also to resolve definition issues regarding the pig production systems. Our prediction model of the interface between pig and wild boar at European level indicated that the maximum risk is scattered over Central Europe, large parts of Spain, north‐east France and Romania. Hungary, so as Serbia and Croatia in the Balkans are at the highest risk in that area. In the specific case of Romania, no statistically significant association between census data of pigs collected fromnational authorities and predicted values was found when assessing the GLW model, evidencing that GLW predictions do not reliably represents the pig abundance distribution within countries. When assessing the interface model in Spain, certain areas of interaction were lacked, e.g. where extensive farming is relevant. The current discrimination of extensive vs. intensive farms of predictive models (GLW) is not reliable to perform analyses separately for each production system.The outputs this model of interface between wild boar and domestic pigs will guide future steps in both data collection and modelling approach.