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新墨西哥州鼠疫发病率与冬春降水量增加有关。

Incidence of plague associated with increased winter-spring precipitation in New Mexico.

作者信息

Parmenter R R, Yadav E P, Parmenter C A, Ettestad P, Gage K L

机构信息

Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque 87131, USA.

出版信息

Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1999 Nov;61(5):814-21. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1999.61.814.

Abstract

Plague occurs episodically in many parts of the world, and some outbreaks appear to be related to increased abundance of rodents and other mammals that serve as hosts for vector fleas. Climate dynamics may influence the abundance of both fleas and mammals, thereby having an indirect effect on human plague incidence. An understanding of the relationship between climate and plague could be useful in predicting periods of increased risk of plague transmission. In this study, we used correlation analyses of 215 human cases of plague in relation to precipitation records from 1948 to 1996 in areas of New Mexico with history of human plague cases (38 cities, towns, and villages). We conducted analyses using 3 spatial scales: global (El Niño-Southern Oscillation Indices [SOI]); regional (pooled state-wide precipitation averages); and local (precipitation data from weather stations near plague case sites). We found that human plague cases in New Mexico occurred more frequently following winter-spring periods (October to May) with above-average precipitation (mean plague years = 113% of normal rain/ snowfall), resulting in 60% more cases of plague in humans following wet versus dry winter-spring periods. However, we obtained significant results at local level only; regional state-wide precipitation averages and SOI values exhibited no significant correlations to incidence of human plague cases. These results are consistent with our hypothesis of a trophic cascade in which increased winter-spring precipitation enhances small mammal food resource productivity (plants and insects), leading to an increase in the abundance of plague hosts. In addition, moister climate conditions may act to promote flea survival and reproduction, also enhancing plague transmission. Finally, the result that the number of human plague cases in New Mexico was positively associated with higher than normal winter-spring precipitation at a local scale can be used by physicians and public health personnel to identify and predict periods of increased risk of plague transmission to humans.

摘要

鼠疫在世界许多地区呈间歇性发生,一些疫情似乎与作为病媒跳蚤宿主的啮齿动物和其他哺乳动物数量增加有关。气候动态可能会影响跳蚤和哺乳动物的数量,从而对人类鼠疫发病率产生间接影响。了解气候与鼠疫之间的关系有助于预测鼠疫传播风险增加的时期。在本研究中,我们对新墨西哥州有人类鼠疫病例历史的地区(38个城市、城镇和村庄)1948年至1996年的215例人类鼠疫病例与降水记录进行了相关性分析。我们使用了3个空间尺度进行分析:全球尺度(厄尔尼诺-南方涛动指数[SOI]);区域尺度(全州降水平均值汇总);以及局部尺度(鼠疫病例地点附近气象站的降水数据)。我们发现,新墨西哥州的人类鼠疫病例在冬春季节(10月至5月)降水高于平均水平后更频繁发生(鼠疫平均年份的降水量是正常雨雪量的113%),导致湿润冬春季节后的人类鼠疫病例比干燥冬春季节多60%。然而,我们仅在局部尺度上得到了显著结果;全州区域降水平均值和SOI值与人类鼠疫病例发病率没有显著相关性。这些结果与我们的营养级联假说一致,即冬春降水增加会提高小型哺乳动物食物资源(植物和昆虫)的生产力,导致鼠疫宿主数量增加。此外,更湿润的气候条件可能会促进跳蚤的生存和繁殖,也会增强鼠疫的传播。最后,新墨西哥州人类鼠疫病例数在局部尺度上与高于正常水平的冬春降水呈正相关这一结果,可供医生和公共卫生人员用于识别和预测鼠疫传播给人类的风险增加时期。

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