Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Montana State University, Montana, MT, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2018 Apr;21(4):471-483. doi: 10.1111/ele.12904. Epub 2018 Feb 21.
Pathogen spillover from wildlife to domestic animals and humans, and the reverse, has caused significant epidemics and pandemics worldwide. Although pathogen emergence has been linked to anthropogenic land conversion, a general framework to disentangle underlying processes is lacking. We develop a multi-host model for pathogen transmission between species inhabiting intact and converted habitat. Interspecies contacts and host populations vary with the proportion of land converted; enabling us to quantify infection risk across a changing landscape. In a range of scenarios, the highest spillover risk occurs at intermediate levels of habitat loss, whereas the largest, but rarest, epidemics occur at extremes of land conversion. This framework provides insights into the mechanisms driving disease emergence and spillover during land conversion. The finding that the risk of spillover is highest at intermediate levels of habitat loss provides important guidance for conservation and public health policy.
从野生动物到家畜和人类的病原体溢出,以及相反的情况,已经在全球范围内造成了重大的传染病和大流行。尽管病原体的出现与人为的土地转换有关,但缺乏一个能够厘清潜在过程的通用框架。我们为栖息在完整和转换生境中的物种之间的病原体传播开发了一个多宿主模型。物种间的接触和宿主种群随土地转换比例的变化而变化;使我们能够在不断变化的景观中量化感染风险。在一系列情景中,最高的溢出风险出现在生境丧失的中等水平,而最大但最罕见的传染病出现在土地转换的极端水平。该框架提供了对土地转换过程中疾病出现和溢出的驱动机制的深入了解。溢出风险在生境丧失的中等水平最高的发现为保护和公共卫生政策提供了重要的指导。