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Maendeleo Vijijini
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Pig rearing remains a lucrative business, but it is often disrupted by diseases.
One
of the diseases that attack pigs is the African Swine Fever. The
disease is characterised by loss of appetite; the skin under the ears,
snout, legs and abdomen becomes dark blue, and the animals vomit and
cough.
The pigs may further bleed from the nose and
rectum, have difficulties in breathing and they will diarrhoea. In
short, African Swine Fever is the most deadly pig disease.
The
viral disease is highly contagious and affects domesticated and wild
pigs and warthogs. It is transmitted mainly through direct contact with
already infected pigs, their body fluids or their droppings, indirectly
by ingestion of infected feedstuff especially garbage and by ticks that
are vectors of the causing virus.
Sadly, African Swine
Fever has no treatment and can wipe out an entire pig farm. No vaccines
have been developed but several bio-security measures can be practised
to minimise its spread. Watch out for biting flies, ticks, and limit the
number of vehicles and people visiting your farm since they are other
possible carriers of the disease.
In fact to be safe,
provide cover clothing material for visitors and ensure equipment used
in your farm is clean. Make sure your visitors disinfect their shoes
while vehicles run through a disinfectant. If possible, fence your pig
farm to keep away wild animals like warthogs, forest hogs and domestic
pigs and their ticks.
Pig farmers further need to look out on housing structure, stocking density and feeding to curb the disease.
Also,
be on the lookout for outbreaks since clinical signs can always be
seen. In some cases, the disease may be in mild strain that infected
pigs possibly do not show typical signs making it unrecognisable for
some time.
In other circumstances, it may be severe,
described by high fever and sudden deaths. African Swine Fever has 100
per cent mortality rate and diagnosis is made from clinical signs and
collecting samples of spleen and blood for lab analysis.
This
is because in the body of susceptible animals, the virus dominantly
concentrates in the blood and minor areas like meat, bones and skin.
Besides
the bio-security measures, slaughter and dispose pigs infected with the
disease and report cases for action by various veterinary bodies.
If
the vet confirms the disease from laboratory diagnosis, the area of the
outbreak should be quarantined to enclose the causative agent and to
prevent spread. Thereafter, if your farm is infected, disinfect your
premises thoroughly and do not re-populate for about two weeks.
Piggeries
should have good drainage systems coupled with high standards of
hygiene to help minimise disease attacks. Parasites being a major
problem in the pig industry, farmers should control internal parasites
like worms and external parasites like mites and lice, which stagger
production levels.
Opinya works in the Department of Animal Science, Egerton University
SOURCE: NMG
SOURCE: NMG
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