Kakani Sravan, LaBeaud A Desirée, King Charles H
Center for Global Health and Diseases, Case Western Reserve University, School of Medicine, 10900 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44106-7286, USA.
Geospat Health. 2010 Nov;5(1):33-43. doi: 10.4081/gh.2010.185.
Rift Valley fever (RVF) virus is a mosquito-borne phlebovirus of the Bunyaviridae family that causes frequent outbreaks of severe animal and human disease in sub-Saharan Africa, Egypt and the Arabian Peninsula. Based on its many known competent vectors, its potential for transmission via aerosolization, and its progressive spread from East Africa to neighbouring regions, RVF is considered a high-priority, emerging health threat for humans, livestock and wildlife in all parts of the world. Introduction of West Nile virus to North America has shown the potential for "exotic" viral pathogens to become embedded in local ecological systems. While RVF is known to infect and amplify within domestic livestock, such as taurine cattle, sheep and goats, if RVF virus is accidentally or intentionally introduced into North America, an important unknown factor will be the role of local wildlife in the maintenance or propagation of virus transmission. We examined the potential impact of RVF transmission via white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in a typical north-eastern United States urban-suburban landscape, where livestock are rare but where these potentially susceptible, ungulate wildlife are highly abundant. Model results, based on overlap of mosquito, human and projected deer densities, indicate that a significant proportion (497/1186 km(2), i.e. 42%) of the urban and peri-urban landscape could be affected by RVF transmission during the late summer months. Deer population losses, either by intervention for herd reduction or by RVF-related mortality, would substantially reduce these likely transmission zones to 53.1 km(2), i.e. by 89%.
裂谷热(RVF)病毒是一种由蚊子传播的布尼亚病毒科白蛉病毒,在撒哈拉以南非洲、埃及和阿拉伯半岛频繁引发严重的动物和人类疾病疫情。基于其众多已知的有效传播媒介、通过气溶胶传播的可能性以及从东非向周边地区的逐步扩散,裂谷热被认为是对世界各地人类、牲畜和野生动物构成高度优先的新出现的健康威胁。西尼罗河病毒传入北美已表明“外来”病毒病原体嵌入当地生态系统的可能性。虽然已知裂谷热病毒在家养牲畜(如普通牛、绵羊和山羊)中感染并增殖,但如果裂谷热病毒意外或有意传入北美,一个重要的未知因素将是当地野生动物在病毒传播维持或扩散中的作用。我们在美国东北部典型的城乡景观中研究了通过白尾鹿(弗吉尼亚鹿)传播裂谷热的潜在影响,在该地区牲畜稀少,但这些潜在易感的有蹄类野生动物数量众多。基于蚊子、人类和预计鹿的密度重叠的模型结果表明,在夏末几个月,城市和城郊景观的很大一部分(497/1186平方公里,即42%)可能受到裂谷热传播的影响。通过减少鹿群数量的干预措施或与裂谷热相关的死亡率导致的鹿群数量减少,将使这些可能的传播区域大幅减少至53.1平方公里,即减少89%。