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Life

Bluetongue virus licks northern Europe

30 August 2006

In the coming weeks farmers in northern Europe will be counting sheep, but not to help them sleep. They are keeping a close eye on their flocks after the appearance of the bluetongue virus in sheep in the Netherlands. Transmitted by midges, the virus usually occurs in warm, wet areas, and has never been seen so far north.

The virus causes high fever and swelling of the tongue in ruminants, and can kill up to 30 per cent of infected sheep. “It devastates sheep populations,” says Walter Tabachnick of the University of Florida in Vero Beach.

Changes in Europe’s climate…

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