Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Department of Farm Animal Health, Utrecht University, Yalelaan 7, 3584 CL Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Georges Lemaître Centre for Earth and Climate Research (TECLIM), Earth and Life Institute, Université catholique de Louvain, Place Louis Pasteur 3 bte L4.03.07, B 1348, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2015 Nov;90(4):1151-62. doi: 10.1111/brv.12149. Epub 2014 Oct 22.
Given the veterinary and public health impact of vector-borne diseases, there is a clear need to assess the suitability of landscapes for the emergence and spread of these diseases. Current approaches for predicting disease risks neglect key features of the landscape as components of the functional habitat of vectors or hosts, and hence of the pathogen. Empirical-statistical methods do not explicitly incorporate biological mechanisms, whereas current mechanistic models are rarely spatially explicit; both methods ignore the way animals use the landscape (i.e. movement ecology). We argue that applying a functional concept for habitat, i.e. the resource-based habitat concept (RBHC), can solve these issues. The RBHC offers a framework to identify systematically the different ecological resources that are necessary for the completion of the transmission cycle and to relate these resources to (combinations of) landscape features and other environmental factors. The potential of the RBHC as a framework for identifying suitable habitats for vector-borne pathogens is explored and illustrated with the case of bluetongue virus, a midge-transmitted virus affecting ruminants. The concept facilitates the study of functional habitats of the interacting species (vectors as well as hosts) and provides new insight into spatial and temporal variation in transmission opportunities and exposure that ultimately determine disease risks. It may help to identify knowledge gaps and control options arising from changes in the spatial configuration of key resources across the landscape. The RBHC framework may act as a bridge between existing mechanistic and statistical modelling approaches.
鉴于媒介传播疾病对兽医和公共卫生的影响,显然需要评估景观对这些疾病出现和传播的适宜性。目前用于预测疾病风险的方法忽略了景观的关键特征,而这些特征是媒介或宿主的功能栖息地的组成部分,也是病原体的组成部分。经验统计方法没有明确纳入生物学机制,而当前的机制模型很少具有空间明确性;这两种方法都忽略了动物利用景观的方式(即运动生态学)。我们认为,应用基于资源的栖息地功能概念(RBHC)可以解决这些问题。RBHC 提供了一个框架,可以系统地识别完成传播周期所需的不同生态资源,并将这些资源与(组合的)景观特征和其他环境因素联系起来。以蓝舌病病毒为例,探讨了 RBHC 作为识别媒介传播病原体适宜栖息地的框架的潜力,蓝舌病病毒是一种影响反刍动物的蠓传播病毒。该概念促进了相互作用物种(媒介以及宿主)的功能栖息地研究,并为传播机会和暴露的时空变化提供了新的见解,而传播机会和暴露最终决定了疾病风险。它可能有助于确定由于景观中关键资源的空间配置发生变化而产生的知识差距和控制选择。RBHC 框架可以作为现有机制和统计建模方法之间的桥梁。