Our aim was to examine, for the first time, the spatial and network characteristics of cattle movements between herds in the Republic of Ireland (ROI), to inform policy and research of relevance to the surveillance and management of disease in Irish cattle. We analysed movements in 2016 as discrete herd to herd pairings (degree), herd to herd pairings by date of move (contacts) and herd to herd pairings by date and individual animal (transfers), and looked at each of these as movements out of a herd (out degree, out contacts, out transfers) and into a herd (in degree, in contacts, in transfers). We found that the frequency distributions, by herd, of these six move types were all heavily right skewed but in the case of the ‘out’ data types m...
Background: The cattle sector is the most important economic production unit of the Irish farming an...
Movement of animals between farms represents a potential risk of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) and other...
<p>Movement of animals from one farm to another is a potential risk and can lead to the spread...
Our aim was to examine, for the first time, the spatial and network characteristics of cattle moveme...
An understanding of livestock movement is critical to effective disease prevention, control and pred...
Data on cattle movements within the United Kingdom have recently become available. As part of the c...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Elsevier via the DOI in this recordThe natu...
Background: Individual animal-level reporting of cattle movements between agricultural holdings is ...
The modelling of disease spread is crucial to the farming industry and policy makers. In some of the...
Abstract Background More and more countries hold databases on cattle movements. The primary purpose ...
Background: The United Kingdom (UK) government has been recording the births, deaths, and movements ...
Understanding the herd structure of housed dairy cows has the potential to reveal preferential inter...
Network models are increasingly being used to understand the spread of diseases through sparsely con...
This paper reviews the main temporal and spatial characteristics of cattle movements in Britain, bas...
Abstract Introduction The spatial association dynamics of free-ranging cattle herds are not fully un...
Background: The cattle sector is the most important economic production unit of the Irish farming an...
Movement of animals between farms represents a potential risk of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) and other...
<p>Movement of animals from one farm to another is a potential risk and can lead to the spread...
Our aim was to examine, for the first time, the spatial and network characteristics of cattle moveme...
An understanding of livestock movement is critical to effective disease prevention, control and pred...
Data on cattle movements within the United Kingdom have recently become available. As part of the c...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Elsevier via the DOI in this recordThe natu...
Background: Individual animal-level reporting of cattle movements between agricultural holdings is ...
The modelling of disease spread is crucial to the farming industry and policy makers. In some of the...
Abstract Background More and more countries hold databases on cattle movements. The primary purpose ...
Background: The United Kingdom (UK) government has been recording the births, deaths, and movements ...
Understanding the herd structure of housed dairy cows has the potential to reveal preferential inter...
Network models are increasingly being used to understand the spread of diseases through sparsely con...
This paper reviews the main temporal and spatial characteristics of cattle movements in Britain, bas...
Abstract Introduction The spatial association dynamics of free-ranging cattle herds are not fully un...
Background: The cattle sector is the most important economic production unit of the Irish farming an...
Movement of animals between farms represents a potential risk of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) and other...
<p>Movement of animals from one farm to another is a potential risk and can lead to the spread...