Yanyan Lian, Hairong Li, Linsheng Yang, Li Wang, Lijuan Gu, Svetlana M Malkhazova, Natalia Shartova
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The potential risk of rodent-borne diseases along the China-Russia border necessitates the identification and prediction of rodent distribution from a risk management perspective. In this study, we compile distribution records for Apodemus agrarius, which is the main host of hantavirus responsible for hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS), along the border between China and Russia from various literature sources. We then employ the maximum entropy model (MaxEnt) to assess the influence of climatic and geographic factors on its potential distribution and to predict its current and future habitats. The results show that the current suitable habitats are mainly located in the northeastern part of Heilongjiang Province bordering Russia, showing similar pattern with HFRS incidence rate. The environmental factors that contribute more to the distribution of A. agrarius included temperature, precipitation, elevation, and landscape features of cropland and forest. By 2050, due to changes in climate and land use, the suitable habitat of A. agrarius is expected to shift northeastward, thereby altering the distribution of HFRS risk. Despite anticipated shifts in host habitat, HFRS risk along the China-Russia border will remain high. Therefore, joint prevention and control measures and targeted protective strategies for at-risk populations should be developed.
期刊介绍:
EcoHealth aims to advance research, practice, and knowledge integration at the interface of ecology and health by publishing high quality research and review articles that address and profile new ideas, developments, and programs. The journal’s scope encompasses research that integrates concepts and theory from many fields of scholarship (including ecological, social and health sciences, and the humanities) and draws upon multiple types of knowledge, including those of relevance to practice and policy. Papers address integrated ecology and health challenges arising in public health, human and veterinary medicine, conservation and ecosystem management, rural and urban development and planning, and other fields that address the social-ecological context of health. The journal is a central platform for fulfilling the mission of the EcoHealth Alliance to strive for sustainable health of people, domestic animals, wildlife, and ecosystems by promoting discovery, understanding, and transdisciplinarity.
The journal invites substantial contributions in the following areas:
One Health and Conservation Medicine
o Integrated research on health of humans, wildlife, livestock and ecosystems
o Research and policy in ecology, public health, and agricultural sustainability
o Emerging infectious diseases affecting people, wildlife, domestic animals, and plants
o Research and practice linking human and animal health and/or social-ecological systems
o Anthropogenic environmental change and drivers of disease emergence in humans, wildlife, livestock and ecosystems
o Health of humans and animals in relation to terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems
Ecosystem Approaches to Health
o Systems thinking and social-ecological systems in relation to health
o Transdiiplinary approaches to health, ecosystems and society.