A preliminary epidemiological survey was carried out to find out whether contagious agalactia of sheep and goats was present in herds in the Czech Republic or Jordan. A total of 99 animals were examined for the presence of Mycoplasma agalactiae antigen; there were 64 animals from the Czech Republic and 35 from Jordan. All Jordanian animals showed signs of clinical disease. Biological materials for examination included 353 swabs (133 from sheep and 220 from goats) collected from conjunctival, nasal and vaginal mucosae and the external ear canal. A monoclonal antibody-based sandwich ELISA was used to detect the antigen. The results were positive in 11 animals, ambiguous in 10 animals and negative in the rest of them (78). They confirmed our assumption that the Czech Republic is still free from contagious agalactia of sheep and goats but demonstrated that Jordanian herds of small ruminants are infected with Mycoplasma agalactiae.
Sheep, goats, contagious agalactia, antigen, Mycoplasma agalactiae, ELISAMycoplasma agalactiae (M. agalactiae) is an important pathogen of small ruminants that causes contagious agalactia in sheep and goats (Bergonier et al. 1997). The disease primarily affects the mammary glands, joints, eyes and, to a lesser degree, respiratory tract. It is clinically manifested as mastitis, arthritis, conjunctivitis and pneumonia (Nicholas 1996). However, similar clinical and pathological changes in these animals can also be caused by mycoplasma species (Nicholas 1996; Sarris 1996; Bölske 1994) included into the "Mycoplasma mycoides cluster" (Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides LC, Mycoplasma capricolum subsp. capricolum and Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. capri). A very similar disease found only in goats is caused by Mycoplasma putrefaciens (Bergonier et al. 1997).Contagious agalactia currently occurs in most of the countries with intensive rearing of sheep and goats. This involves the Mediterranean region and Balkan Peninsula in Europe, western parts of Asia and northern, central and eastern Africa (Al-Zeftawi 1979;Damdinsuren 1989;Erdag 1989;Belaid et al. 1990;Da Massa et al. 1992;Ismail 1993;Sarris 1996;Egwu et al. 1999;Kusiluka et al. 2000;Madanat et al. 2001).In this preliminary epidemiological survey we examined animals from randomly selected Czech and Jordanian herds for the presence of M. agalactiae antigen. In the former Czechoslovakia, the mycoplasma causing contagious agalactia was last detected in sheep imported into the country at the beginning of the 1950s (Koppel 1982). The disease was then managed by culling all the infected animals and, since then, the Czech Republic has been regarded as free from contagious agalactia. Our objective was to confirm this assumption. On the other hand, Jordan is located in the geographical area in which contagious agalactia shows a high prevalence, but no information on mycoplasma infections in Jordanian sheep and goats has so far been available.