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African Swine Fever

Scientific Name

African swine fever virus (Alonso et al. 2018)

Common Name

African swine fever, African swine fever virus (ASF, ASFV)

Native To

First identified in Kenya in 1921 (Sánchez‐Vizcaíno et al. 2012)

Date of U.S. Introduction

Pathogen has not been detected in the U.S. (Brown and Bevin 2018)

Means of Introduction

Most likely pathway into the U.S. is the illegal importation of swine products or byproducts (APHIS)

Impact

Highly contagious and fatal viral disease affecting domestic and wild pigs; one of the most economically devastating diseases of swine (APHIS; Sánchez‐Vizcaíno et al. 2012)

African swine fever research

Microbiologist Zhiqiang Lu uses a DNA sequencer to examine genetically engineered African swine fever viruses

Credit

Photo by Keith Weller; USDA, Agricultural Research Service

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Spotlights

  • USDA Launches ‘Protect Our Pigs’ Campaign to Support the Pork Industry, Pig Owners, Veterinarians in the Fight Against African Swine Fever

    • Jun 15, 2022
    • USDA. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

    • The United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has announced new efforts to help prevent the introduction and spread of African swine fever in the U.S. Through an outreach and awareness campaign called “Protect Our Pigs,” APHIS will support commercial pork producers, veterinarians, and pig owners with information and resources to help safeguard America’s swine population and the pork industry.

      APHIS is deploying a variety of outreach efforts to support critical stakeholders. The new Protect Our Pigs website will house materials such as downloadable fact sheets and posters, instructional videos, shareable social media graphics, a new interactive biosecurity guide, and offer the latest disease updates. If African swine fever is detected in the U.S., APHIS will also be ready to respond immediately with actionable information and resources for pig owners and the public.

  • African Swine Fever Virus Vaccine Passes Tests Required for Regulatory Approval

    • Apr 25, 2022
    • USDA. ARS. Tellus.

    • Scientists with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service (ARS) announced that a vaccine candidate for African Swine Fever (ASF) passed an important safety test required for regulatory approval, moving the vaccine one step closer to commercial availability.

  • African Swine Fever - Report Feral Swine [PDF, 365 KB]

    • May 2020
    • USDA. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

    • Feral swine can carry foreign animal diseases like African Swine Fever. While ASF has never been found in domestic or feral swine in the United States, there is no treatment or vaccine for it. That’s why surveillance is very important. Help protect U.S. pigs by immediately reporting sick or dead feral swine.

      WHAT TO DO: If you find a sick or dead feral swine with no obvious injury or cause of death, report it right away. Call the USDA-APHIS Wildlife Services program in your State at 1-866-4-USDA-WS. Don’t wait! Quick detection is essential to preventing the spread of ASF.

  • African Swine Fever (ASF) Story Map

    • USDA. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

    • An interactive story map of the USDA’s effort to protect our pigs.
      See also: APHIS in Action to explore plant and animal health or wildlife damage management data and Interactive Story Maps

  • Protect Our Pigs: Fight African Swine Fever

    • USDA. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

    • African swine fever is a deadly pig disease that spreads rapidly and affects domestic and wild swine. While not a threat to human health, the virus could devastate America’s swine, pork industry, and food supply. Whatever pigs mean to you—your livelihood or a pet—we’re all in it together. Protect our swine and keep the disease out of the United States.

Federally Regulated

Videos

Selected Resources

The section below contains highly relevant resources for this species, organized by source.

Partnership
Federal Government
International Government
State and Local Government
Academic
Professional
Citations