Centre de Recherche et de Veille sur Maladies Émergentes dans l'Océan Indien, plateforme de recherche CYROI, 2 rue Maxime Rivière, 97490 Ste Clotilde, France.
Infect Genet Evol. 2012 Aug;12(6):1333-9. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2012.03.024. Epub 2012 Apr 4.
The spatial dynamics of zoonotic arthropod-borne viruses is a fashionable though challenging topic. Inter-human local transmission of a given arbovirus during an outbreak and its spread over large distances are considered as key parameters of emergence. Here, we suggest that insular ecosystems provide ideal natural "laboratory" conditions to uncouple local transmission from long distance spread, and differentiate these two processes. Due to geographic isolation, often-limited land surface area and relatively homogenous ecosystems, oceanic islands display low species richness and often-high levels of endemism. These aspects provide the means for comprehensive entomological surveys and investigations of original host/pathogen interactions. In addition, islands are interconnected through discrete anthropogenic and non-anthropogenic exchanges: whilst islands maintain a substantial level of human and domestic animal exchange with other neighbouring or distant territories, they also comprise dispersal and migratory pathways of volant organisms (insects, birds and bats). Hence, both anthropogenic and non-anthropogenic exchanges in island systems are easier to identify and investigate than in continuous, continental systems. Finally, island ecosystems tend to be notably simpler, more prone to invasive taxa and, therefore, easier to document the colonization or displacement of vector species. These different aspects are presented and overlaid upon the spread of arboviruses within two distinct insular systems: islands of Polynesia and the south-western Indian Ocean. The former have been repeatedly affected by Dengue fever epidemics, while the latter recently suffered four successive epidemics, probably of east African origin, three of which involved the emerging viruses Chikungunya, Rift Valley and Dengue fever. Here, we review some new insights into arboviral spread and evolution associated with investigations that followed these epidemics, as well as several aspects that make insular ecosystems favourable to the investigation of arboviral transmission and spread.
人畜共患节肢动物传播病毒的空间动态是一个时尚而具有挑战性的话题。在暴发期间,一种特定虫媒病毒在人与人之间的局部传播及其远距离传播被认为是出现的关键参数。在这里,我们认为岛屿生态系统提供了理想的自然“实验室”条件,可以将局部传播与远距离传播分开,并区分这两个过程。由于地理位置的孤立、陆地表面面积的限制以及相对同质的生态系统,海洋岛屿的物种丰富度较低,而特有种的比例较高。这些方面为全面的昆虫学调查和原始宿主/病原体相互作用的研究提供了条件。此外,岛屿通过离散的人为和非人为的交流相互连接:虽然岛屿与其他邻近或遥远的领土保持着大量的人类和家养动物的交流,但它们也包含了飞行生物(昆虫、鸟类和蝙蝠)的扩散和迁徙途径。因此,岛屿系统中的人为和非人为交流比连续的大陆系统更容易识别和研究。最后,岛屿生态系统往往更为简单,更容易受到入侵物种的影响,因此更容易记录媒介物种的定殖或取代。这些不同的方面在两个不同的岛屿系统中展示并叠加了虫媒病毒的传播:波利尼西亚群岛和西南印度洋的岛屿。前者多次受到登革热流行的影响,而后者最近遭受了四次连续的流行,可能起源于东非,其中三次涉及新兴病毒基孔肯雅热、裂谷热和登革热。在这里,我们回顾了一些新的见解,即与这些流行疫情相关的虫媒病毒传播和进化的研究,以及一些使岛屿生态系统有利于调查虫媒病毒传播和扩散的方面。