MIVEGEC (UMR UM2-UM1-CNRS 5290, UR IRD 224), Centre IRD, BP 64501, 911 avenue Agropolis, 34394 Montpellier Cedex 5, France.
Exp Appl Acarol. 2013 Feb;59(1-2):219-44. doi: 10.1007/s10493-012-9615-0. Epub 2012 Sep 27.
Today, we are witnessing changes in the spatial distribution and abundance of many species, including ticks and their associated pathogens. Evidence that these changes are primarily due to climate change, habitat modifications, and the globalisation of human activities are accumulating. Changes in the distribution of ticks and their invasion into new regions can have numerous consequences including modifications in their ecological characteristics and those of endemic species, impacts on the dynamics of local host populations and the emergence of human and livestock disease. Here, we review the principal causes for distributional shifts in tick populations and their consequences in terms of the ecological attributes of the species in question (i.e. phenotypic and genetic responses), pathogen transmission and disease epidemiology. We also describe different methodological approaches currently used to assess and predict such changes and their consequences. We finish with a discussion of new research avenues to develop in order to improve our understanding of these host-vector-pathogen interactions in the context of a changing world.
今天,我们见证了许多物种的空间分布和丰度发生了变化,包括蜱虫及其相关病原体。越来越多的证据表明,这些变化主要是由于气候变化、栖息地改变和人类活动的全球化。蜱虫分布的变化及其向新地区的入侵可能会产生许多后果,包括改变其生态特征和地方性物种的特征,影响当地宿主种群的动态以及人类和家畜疾病的出现。在这里,我们回顾了蜱虫种群分布变化的主要原因及其对物种生态属性(即表型和遗传反应)、病原体传播和疾病流行病学的影响。我们还描述了目前用于评估和预测这些变化及其后果的不同方法。最后,我们讨论了为了在不断变化的世界中更好地理解这些宿主-媒介-病原体相互作用而需要开发的新研究途径。