Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University , College Station, TX , USA.
USDA-ARS Knipling-Bushland U.S. Livestock Insects Research Laboratory , Kerrville, TX , USA.
Front Public Health. 2014 Nov 17;2:177. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2014.00177. eCollection 2014.
Transboundary zoonotic diseases, several of which are vector borne, can maintain a dynamic focus and have pathogens circulating in geographic regions encircling multiple geopolitical boundaries. Global change is intensifying transboundary problems, including the spatial variation of the risk and incidence of zoonotic diseases. The complexity of these challenges can be greater in areas where rivers delineate international boundaries and encompass transitions between ecozones. The Rio Grande serves as a natural border between the US State of Texas and the Mexican States of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas. Not only do millions of people live in this transboundary region, but also a substantial amount of goods and people pass through it everyday. Moreover, it occurs over a region that functions as a corridor for animal migrations, and thus links the Neotropic and Nearctic biogeographic zones, with the latter being a known foci of zoonotic diseases. However, the pathogenic landscape of important zoonotic diseases in the south Texas-Mexico transboundary region remains to be fully understood. An international perspective on the interplay between disease systems, ecosystem processes, land use, and human behaviors is applied here to analyze landscape and spatial features of Venezuelan equine encephalitis, Hantavirus disease, Lyme Borreliosis, Leptospirosis, Bartonellosis, Chagas disease, human Babesiosis, and Leishmaniasis. Surveillance systems following the One Health approach with a regional perspective will help identifying opportunities to mitigate the health burden of those diseases on human and animal populations. It is proposed that the Mexico-US border along the Rio Grande region be viewed as a continuum landscape where zoonotic pathogens circulate regardless of national borders.
跨界人畜共患病,其中有几种是通过媒介传播的,可以维持一个动态的焦点,并使病原体在环绕多个地缘政治边界的地理区域中传播。全球变化正在加剧跨界问题,包括人畜共患病风险和发病率的空间变化。在河流划定国际边界并包含生态区之间过渡的地区,这些挑战的复杂性可能更大。格兰德河是美国德克萨斯州和墨西哥奇瓦瓦州、科阿韦拉州、新莱昂州和塔毛利帕斯州之间的天然边界。不仅数百万人生活在这个跨界地区,而且每天还有大量的人和货物通过这里。此外,它还位于一个作为动物迁徙走廊的区域,连接了新热带区和近北区,后者是已知的人畜共患病焦点。然而,南德克萨斯-墨西哥跨界地区重要人畜共患病的病原景观仍有待充分了解。从疾病系统、生态系统过程、土地利用和人类行为之间相互作用的国际视角出发,在这里分析委内瑞拉马脑炎、汉坦病毒病、莱姆病、钩端螺旋体病、巴尔通体病、恰加斯病、人类巴贝斯虫病和利什曼病的景观和空间特征。采用区域视角的“同一健康”方法的监测系统将有助于确定减轻这些疾病对人类和动物种群的健康负担的机会。有人建议,将格兰德河沿岸的美墨边境视为一个连续的景观,无论国界如何,人畜共患病原体都在那里传播。