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非洲地区肠道血吸虫病的大规模决定因素及中间宿主钉螺的分布:气候是否重要?

Large-scale determinants of intestinal schistosomiasis and intermediate host snail distribution across Africa: does climate matter?

机构信息

Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark; DBL, Department of Veterinary Disease Biology, University of Copenhagen, Thorvaldsensvej 57, DK-1871 Frederiksberg C, Denmark.

出版信息

Acta Trop. 2013 Nov;128(2):378-90. doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2011.11.010. Epub 2011 Nov 28.

Abstract

The geographical ranges of most species, including many infectious disease agents and their vectors and intermediate hosts, are assumed to be constrained by climatic tolerances, mainly temperature. It has been suggested that global warming will cause an expansion of the areas potentially suitable for infectious disease transmission. However, the transmission of infectious diseases is governed by a myriad of ecological, economic, evolutionary and social factors. Hence, a deeper understanding of the total disease system (pathogens, vectors and hosts) and its drivers is important for predicting responses to climate change. Here, we combine a growing degree day model for Schistosoma mansoni with species distribution models for the intermediate host snail (Biomphalaria spp.) to investigate large-scale environmental determinants of the distribution of the African S. mansoni-Biomphalaria system and potential impacts of climatic changes. Snail species distribution models included several combinations of climatic and habitat-related predictors; the latter divided into "natural" and "human-impacted" habitat variables to measure anthropogenic influence. The predictive performance of the combined snail-parasite model was evaluated against a comprehensive compilation of historical S. mansoni parasitological survey records, and then examined for two climate change scenarios of increasing severity for 2080. Future projections indicate that while the potential S. mansoni transmission area expands, the snail ranges are more likely to contract and/or move into cooler areas in the south and east. Importantly, we also note that even though climate per se matters, the impact of humans on habitat play a crucial role in determining the distribution of the intermediate host snails in Africa. Thus, a future contraction in the geographical range size of the intermediate host snails caused by climatic changes does not necessarily translate into a decrease or zero-sum change in human schistosomiasis prevalence.

摘要

大多数物种的地理分布范围,包括许多传染病病原体及其媒介和中间宿主,被认为受到气候容忍度的限制,主要是温度。有人认为,全球变暖将导致传染病传播的潜在适宜区扩大。然而,传染病的传播受到生态、经济、进化和社会等诸多因素的影响。因此,深入了解整个疾病系统(病原体、媒介和宿主)及其驱动因素对于预测对气候变化的反应非常重要。在这里,我们结合曼氏血吸虫的积温模型和中间宿主蜗牛(Biomphalaria spp.)的物种分布模型,研究了非洲曼氏血吸虫-蜗牛系统分布的大规模环境决定因素及其对气候变化的潜在影响。蜗牛物种分布模型包括了几种气候和与栖息地相关的预测因子的组合;后者分为“自然”和“人为影响”的栖息地变量,以衡量人为影响。综合蜗牛-寄生虫模型的预测性能是根据历史曼氏血吸虫寄生虫学调查记录的综合汇编进行评估的,然后针对 2080 年两种日益严重的气候变化情景进行了检查。未来预测表明,尽管潜在的曼氏血吸虫传播面积扩大,但蜗牛的范围更有可能收缩,并/或转移到南部和东部较冷的地区。重要的是,我们还注意到,即使气候本身很重要,人类对栖息地的影响在确定非洲中间宿主蜗牛的分布方面起着至关重要的作用。因此,气候变化导致中间宿主蜗牛地理分布范围缩小,不一定会导致人类血吸虫病流行率下降或零和变化。

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