Ecological Interactions Influencing the Emergence, Abundance, and Human Exposure to Tick-Borne Pathogens

M. Diuk-Wasser, Maria P Fernandez, S. Davis
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Tick-borne pathogens pose the greatest vector-borne disease burden in temperate areas of Europe and North America. We synthesize key aspects of tick life history that enable ticks to persist, spread and impact human health, including a two-year life cycle, multiple transmission pathways and dependence on hosts for tick feeding, movement and pathogen transmission. We discuss modeling advances that incorporate these traits in the context of climate-driven variation in tick feeding phenology. For established pathogens, such as the Lyme disease agent in the United States, we disentangle the linkages between land use change, habitat fragmentation and host diversity influencing human risk of infection along an urbanization gradient. We propose a coupled natural-human system framework for tick-borne pathogens that accounts for nonlinear effects and feedbacks between the enzootic cycle and human spillover. A deeper understanding of the eco-bio-social determinants of these diseases is required to develop more effective public health interventions.
影响蜱传病原体出现、丰度和人类暴露的生态相互作用
在欧洲和北美的温带地区,蜱传病原体是最大的媒介传播疾病负担。我们综合了蜱虫生活史的关键方面,使蜱虫能够持续存在,传播和影响人类健康,包括两年的生命周期,多种传播途径以及对宿主的依赖,蜱虫的摄食,运动和病原体传播。我们讨论了在气候驱动的蜱虫摄食物候变化背景下纳入这些特征的建模进展。对于已确定的病原体,如美国的莱姆病病原体,我们解开了土地利用变化、栖息地破碎化和宿主多样性之间的联系,这些联系会影响人类在城市化梯度中的感染风险。我们提出了一个耦合的自然-人类系统框架,用于蜱传病原体,该框架考虑了地方性动物循环和人类溢出之间的非线性效应和反馈。需要更深入地了解这些疾病的生态-生物-社会决定因素,以制定更有效的公共卫生干预措施。
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