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Babesiosis of cattle

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 April 2005

R. BOCK
Affiliation:
Tick Fever Centre, Animal and Plant Health Service, Queensland Department of Primary Industries & Fisheries, 280 Grindle Road, Wacol Qld 4076, Australia
L. JACKSON
Affiliation:
Tick Fever Centre, Animal and Plant Health Service, Queensland Department of Primary Industries & Fisheries, 280 Grindle Road, Wacol Qld 4076, Australia
A. DE VOS
Affiliation:
Tick Fever Centre, Animal and Plant Health Service, Queensland Department of Primary Industries & Fisheries, 280 Grindle Road, Wacol Qld 4076, Australia
W. JORGENSEN
Affiliation:
Agency for Food and Fibre Sciences, Department of Primary Industries & Fisheries, Locked Mail Bag No. 4, Moorooka QLD 4105, Australia

Abstract

Tick fever or cattle fever (babesiosis) is economically the most important arthropod-borne disease of cattle worldwide with vast areas of Australia, Africa, South and Central America and the United States continuously under threat. Tick fever was the first disease for which transmission by an arthropod to a mammal was implicated at the turn of the twentieth century and is the first disease to be eradicated from a continent (North America). This review describes the biology of Babesia spp. in the host and the tick, the scale of the problem to the cattle industry, the various components of control programmes, epidemiology, pathogenesis, immunity, vaccination and future research. The emphasis is on Babesia bovis and Babesia bigemina.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

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