De Keukeleire Mathilde, Vanwambeke Sophie O, Somassè Elysée, Kabamba Benoît, Luyasu Victor, Robert Annie
Earth and Life Institute (ELI), Georges Lemaitre Center for Earth and Climate Research, Université catholique de Louvain (UCL), Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium; Pôle Epidémiologie et Biostatistique, Institut de Recherche Expérimentale et Clinique (IREC), Faculté de Santé Publique (FSP), Université catholique de Louvain (UCL), Bruxelles, Belgium.
Earth and Life Institute (ELI), Georges Lemaitre Center for Earth and Climate Research, Université catholique de Louvain (UCL), Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.
Ticks Tick Borne Dis. 2015 Jul;6(5):636-44. doi: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2015.05.008. Epub 2015 May 27.
Just as with forest workers or people practicing outdoor recreational activities, scouts are at high risk for tick bites and tick-borne infections. The risk of a tick bite is shaped not only by environmental and climatic factors but also by land management. The aim of this study was to assess which environmental conditions favour scout-tick contacts, and thus to better understand how these factors and their interactions influence the two components of risk: hazard (related to vector and host ecology) and exposure of humans to disease vectors. A survey was conducted in the summer of 2009 on the incidence of tick bites in scout camps taking place in southern Belgium. Joint effects of landscape composition and configuration, weather, climate, forest and wildlife management were examined using a multiple gamma regression with a log link. The landscape was characterized by buffers of varying sizes around the camps using a detailed land use map, and accounting for climate and weather variables. Landscape composition and configuration had a significant influence on scout-tick contacts: the risk was high when the camp was surrounded by a low proportion of arable land and situated in a complex and fragmented landscape. The distance to the nearest forest patch, the composition of the forest ecotone as well as weather and climatic factors were all significantly associated with scout-tick contacts. Both hazard- and exposure-related variables significantly contributed to the frequency of scout-tick contact. Our results show that environmental conditions favour scout-tick contacts. For example, we emphasize the impact of accessibility of environments suitable for ticks on the risk of contact. We also highlight the significant effect of both hazard and exposure. Our results are consistent with current knowledge, but further investigations on the effect of forest management, e.g. through its impact on forest structure, on the tick-host-pathogen system, and on humans exposure, is required.
与林业工人或从事户外休闲活动的人一样,童子军面临蜱虫叮咬和蜱传感染的高风险。蜱虫叮咬的风险不仅受环境和气候因素影响,还受土地管理影响。本研究的目的是评估哪些环境条件有利于童子军与蜱虫接触,从而更好地理解这些因素及其相互作用如何影响风险的两个组成部分:危害(与病媒和宿主生态相关)以及人类接触疾病病媒的情况。2009年夏天,对比利时南部童子军营地的蜱虫叮咬发生率进行了一项调查。使用对数链接的多元伽马回归分析了景观组成与配置、天气、气候、森林和野生动物管理的联合效应。利用详细的土地利用地图,以营地周围不同大小的缓冲区来表征景观,并考虑气候和天气变量。景观组成与配置对童子军与蜱虫接触有显著影响:当营地周围耕地比例较低且位于复杂破碎的景观中时,风险较高。到最近森林斑块的距离、森林交错带的组成以及天气和气候因素都与童子军与蜱虫接触显著相关。与危害和暴露相关的变量都对童子军与蜱虫接触的频率有显著贡献。我们的结果表明环境条件有利于童子军与蜱虫接触。例如,我们强调适合蜱虫生存的环境的可达性对接触风险的影响。我们还突出了危害和暴露的显著影响。我们的结果与现有知识一致,但需要进一步研究森林管理的影响,例如其对森林结构、蜱虫 - 宿主 - 病原体系统以及人类接触的影响。