Disease spread through animal movements: a static and temporal network analysis of pig trade in Germany
Hartmut H. K. Lentz, Andreas Koher, Philipp H\"ovel, J\"orn Gethmann,, Carola Sauter-Louis, Thomas Selhorst, Franz J. Conraths

TL;DR
This study analyzes pig trade networks in Germany using static and temporal models to understand disease spread potential, highlighting the importance of temporal data for accurate outbreak predictions and intervention strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive framework combining static and temporal network analysis for livestock trade, emphasizing the significance of temporal resolution in disease spread modeling.
Findings
Static network captures key trade system features.
Premises can be classified into two risk categories.
Temporal data improves outbreak size estimation.
Abstract
Background: Animal trade plays an important role for the spread of infectious diseases in livestock populations. As a case study, we consider pig trade in Germany, where trade actors (agricultural premises) form a complex network. The central question is how infectious diseases can potentially spread within the system of trade contacts. We address this question by analyzing the underlying network of animal movements. Methodology/Findings: The considered pig trade dataset spans several years and is analyzed with respect to its potential to spread infectious diseases. Focusing on measurements of network-topological properties, we avoid the usage of external parameters, since these properties are independent of specific pathogens. They are on the contrary of great importance for understanding any general spreading process on this particular network. We analyze the system using different…
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