In this article
PEDV in Pigs: How Flies Spread Infection and What to Do to Stop It
By Dr Duncan Houston
Porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV) is one of the most devastating diseases in pig production, particularly for neonatal piglets. Most producers understand the classic transmission routes like contaminated manure, equipment, and personnel.
What is often underestimated is this:
Flies can carry and spread live, infectious PEDV.
This changes how biosecurity needs to be approached. If fly control is not part of your system, then your system is incomplete.
This guide explains how PEDV actually spreads, the role flies play, what this means for your farm, and what practical steps reduce risk.
Quick Answer
PEDV spreads primarily through contaminated feces, but flies can also carry infectious virus between pigs and facilities. This means fly control is a critical part of biosecurity. Without managing flies, PEDV can persist and spread even when traditional hygiene protocols are in place. If PEDV is present or suspected, immediate action should include both infection control and aggressive fly management.
Why PEDV Is Such a Serious Disease
PEDV targets the intestinal lining.
In piglets, this leads to:
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Severe diarrhea
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Rapid dehydration
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Collapse
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Extremely high mortality
Older pigs often survive, but:
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Growth is reduced
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Feed efficiency drops
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Production losses increase
Clinical Insight
The biggest losses are not just mortality. It is the combination of death, growth setback, and ongoing production impact across the herd.
How PEDV Traditionally Spreads
Most producers are familiar with:
Fecal-Oral Transmission
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Direct ingestion of contaminated manure
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The most important and consistent route
Fomites
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Equipment
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Trucks
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Boots
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Clothing
Aerosol Spread
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Virus-containing particles
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Possible under certain conditions
Decision Checkpoint
If your biosecurity plan only focuses on these routes, you are missing a key vector.
Flies: The Missing Link in Many Biosecurity Programs
Flies interact with:
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Manure
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Feed
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Water
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Animals
They move freely between contaminated and clean areas.
What Research Shows
Studies have demonstrated:
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Flies collected from infected barns test positive for PEDV
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Live virus can be isolated from flies
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Flies can transmit infection to naïve pigs
Clinical Insight
This is not just contamination. This is transmission of infectious virus.
Why Flies Are Such Effective Vectors
Behaviour
Flies:
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Breed in manure
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Move rapidly between areas
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Land on feed and water
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Contact multiple animals
Environmental Advantage
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Thrive in moist, organic environments
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Persist in both warm and cooler conditions
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Can remain active even outside peak summer
Decision Checkpoint
If manure management is poor or fly populations are high, PEDV risk increases significantly.
When Is the Risk Highest?
High-Risk Periods
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Warm weather
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High humidity
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Increased manure accumulation
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High stocking density
Important Insight
Fly risk is not strictly seasonal. Winter activity still occurs, particularly in enclosed systems.
What This Means for Biosecurity
Traditional biosecurity alone is not enough.
You must integrate:
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Hygiene
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Movement control
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Fly control
Clinical Insight
Most outbreaks occur when multiple small gaps align. Flies often represent one of those overlooked gaps.
Severity Framework: How Big Is the Risk?
Low Risk
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Strong hygiene
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Low fly population
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Controlled manure
Moderate Risk
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Seasonal fly increase
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Occasional hygiene gaps
High Risk
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High fly numbers
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Poor manure management
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Active PEDV in the region
Critical
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Active PEDV outbreak
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High fly activity
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Poor containment
Immediate intervention required.
Practical Fly Control That Actually Works
Adult Fly Control
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Fogging systems
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Misting systems
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Fly baits and traps
Larval Control
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Feed-through larvicides
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Insect growth regulators
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Target manure breeding sites
Manure Management
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Remove manure frequently
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Keep areas dry
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Store waste properly
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Prevent accumulation
Environmental Control
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Reduce standing water
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Improve drainage
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Maintain clean surfaces
Decision Checkpoint
If you can see flies consistently in the facility, control measures are already insufficient.
Monitoring Fly Pressure
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Use traps to track population
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Monitor trends over time
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Adjust control strategies based on numbers
Clinical Insight
Fly control is not a one-time action. It is an ongoing system that needs monitoring.
What to Do During a PEDV Outbreak
If PEDV is present:
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Isolate affected animals
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Stop unnecessary movement
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Intensify cleaning and disinfection
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Implement aggressive fly control immediately
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Review manure management
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Train staff on containment protocols
Time-Based Guidance
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Immediate: isolate and control
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First days: reduce spread
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Ongoing: monitor and adjust
Common Mistakes Producers Make
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Ignoring flies as a transmission route
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Treating fly control as optional
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Poor manure management
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Inconsistent hygiene protocols
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Not monitoring fly populations
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Focusing only on visible contamination
Integrating Fly Control Into Biosecurity
Fly control should sit alongside:
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Quarantine protocols
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Equipment disinfection
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Staff hygiene
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Movement control
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Airflow management
Clinical Insight
The strongest systems are layered systems. Removing one layer increases overall risk.
Economic Impact
Failure to control PEDV leads to:
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Piglet mortality
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Reduced growth
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Increased treatment cost
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Production delays
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Long-term herd impact
What Should You Do Right Now?
If you are concerned about PEDV risk:
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Assess fly population
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Review manure management
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Check hygiene protocols
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Implement adult and larval control
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Monitor pig health closely
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Adjust protocols immediately if risk increases
FAQs
Can flies really spread PEDV?
Yes. Research shows they can carry and transmit live virus.
Is fly control enough on its own?
No. It must be combined with full biosecurity.
Is PEDV seasonal?
More common in warm months, but not limited to them.
How quickly can PEDV spread?
Very quickly, especially in young piglets.
What is the most important prevention step?
Layered biosecurity, including fly control.
Final Thoughts
PEDV control is not about one solution.
It is about closing every gap.
The key factors are:
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hygiene
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movement control
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manure management
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fly control
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early response
Flies are often the missing piece.
If you ignore them, you leave the door open.
If you want help reviewing biosecurity gaps, improving fly control programs, or responding to PEDV risk early, ASK A VET™ can help you act before losses occur.