Kilpatrick A Marm, Daszak Peter, Jones Matthew J, Marra Peter P, Kramer Laura D
Consortium for Conservation Medicine, New York, NY 10001, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2006 Sep 22;273(1599):2327-33. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2006.3575.
Heterogeneity in host populations and communities can have large effects on the transmission and control of a pathogen. In extreme cases, a few individuals give rise to the majority of secondary infections, which have been termed super spreading events. Here, we show that transmission of West Nile virus (WNV) is dominated by extreme heterogeneity in the host community, resulting in highly inflated reproductive ratios. A single relatively uncommon avian species, American robin (Turdus migratorius), appeared to be responsible for the majority of WNV-infectious mosquitoes and acted as the species equivalent of a super spreader for this multi-host pathogen. Crows were also highly preferred by mosquitoes at some sites, while house sparrows were significantly avoided. Nonetheless, due to their relative rarity, corvids (crows and jays) were relatively unimportant in WNV amplification. These results challenge current beliefs about the role of certain avian species in WNV amplification and demonstrate the importance of determining contact rates between vectors and host species to understand pathogen transmission dynamics.
宿主种群和群落的异质性会对病原体的传播和控制产生重大影响。在极端情况下,少数个体引发了大多数的二次感染,这些被称为超级传播事件。在这里,我们表明西尼罗河病毒(WNV)的传播主要受宿主群落中极端异质性的影响,导致繁殖率大幅膨胀。一种相对不常见的鸟类——美洲知更鸟(旅鸫),似乎是大多数感染WNV的蚊子的来源,并且作为这种多宿主病原体的超级传播者。在一些地点,乌鸦也极受蚊子青睐,而家麻雀则明显被避开。尽管如此,由于它们相对稀少,鸦科鸟类(乌鸦和松鸦)在WNV扩增中相对不太重要。这些结果挑战了当前关于某些鸟类物种在WNV扩增中作用的看法,并证明了确定病媒与宿主物种之间接触率对于理解病原体传播动态的重要性。