Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, USA.
BMC Ecol. 2013 Sep 25;13:35. doi: 10.1186/1472-6785-13-35.
Landscape complexity can mitigate or facilitate host dispersal, influencing patterns of pathogen transmission. Spatial transmission of pathogens through landscapes, therefore, presents an important but not fully elucidated aspect of transmission dynamics. Using an agent-based model (LiNK) that incorporates GIS data, we examined the effects of landscape information on the spatial patterns of host movement and pathogen transmission in a system of long-tailed macaques and their gut parasites. We first examined the role of the landscape to identify any individual or additive effects on host movement. We then compared modeled dispersal distance to patterns of actual macaque gene flow to both confirm our model's predictions and to understand the role of individual land uses on dispersal. Finally, we compared the rate and the spread of two gastrointestinal parasites, Entamoeba histolytica and E. dispar, to understand how landscape complexity influences spatial patterns of pathogen transmission.
LiNK captured emergent properties of the landscape, finding that interaction effects between landscape layers could mitigate the rate of infection in a non-additive way. We also found that the inclusion of landscape information facilitated an accurate prediction of macaque dispersal patterns across a complex landscape, as confirmed by Mantel tests comparing genetic and simulated dispersed distances. Finally, we demonstrated that landscape heterogeneity proved a significant barrier for a highly virulent pathogen, limiting the dispersal ability of hosts and thus its own transmission into distant populations.
Landscape complexity plays a significant role in determining the path of host dispersal and patterns of pathogen transmission. Incorporating landscape heterogeneity and host behavior into disease management decisions can be important in targeting response efforts, identifying cryptic transmission opportunities, and reducing or understanding potential for unintended ecological and evolutionary consequences. The inclusion of these data into models of pathogen transmission patterns improves our understanding of these dynamics, ultimately proving beneficial for sound public health policy.
景观复杂性可以减轻或促进宿主扩散,从而影响病原体传播模式。因此,病原体通过景观的空间传播呈现出一个重要但尚未完全阐明的传播动力学方面。本研究使用一种基于主体的模型(LiNK),该模型整合了 GIS 数据,研究了景观信息对长尾猕猴及其肠道寄生虫宿主移动和病原体传播空间格局的影响。我们首先检验了景观的作用,以确定其对宿主移动的任何个体或附加效应。然后,我们将模拟的扩散距离与实际猕猴基因流动模式进行比较,以验证我们模型的预测,并了解各个土地利用方式对扩散的作用。最后,我们比较了两种胃肠道寄生虫(溶组织内阿米巴和迪斯帕内阿米巴)的传播速度和传播范围,以了解景观复杂性如何影响病原体传播的空间格局。
LiNK 捕捉到了景观的突现属性,发现景观层之间的相互作用效应可以以非附加的方式减缓感染率。我们还发现,景观信息的纳入有助于准确预测复杂景观中猕猴的扩散模式,这一点通过比较遗传和模拟扩散距离的 Mantel 检验得到了证实。最后,我们证明了景观异质性对高毒力病原体是一个重要的障碍,限制了宿主的扩散能力及其自身向遥远种群的传播。
景观复杂性在决定宿主扩散路径和病原体传播模式方面起着重要作用。将景观异质性和宿主行为纳入疾病管理决策中,对于针对应对工作、识别隐匿的传播机会以及减少或理解潜在的意外生态和进化后果可能非常重要。将这些数据纳入病原体传播模式模型可以提高我们对这些动态的理解,最终有利于合理的公共卫生政策。