Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America.
Earth Research Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jul 31;13(7):e0201665. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0201665. eCollection 2018.
The distribution, abundance and seasonal activity of vector species, such as ticks and mosquitoes, are key determinants of vector-borne disease risk, and are strongly influenced by abiotic and habitat conditions. Despite the numerous species of tick vectors in the heavily populated North American West Coast, all but Ixodes pacificus, the primary vector of the Lyme disease spirochete, is poorly characterized with regard to seasonal activity patterns and fine scale drivers of distribution and abundance, particularly in heavily populated regions of southern California. This lack of knowledge inhibits both scientific understanding and public health efforts to minimize vector exposure and risk of pathogen transmission to humans. Here we address this gap by characterizing the abiotic and habitat drivers of the distribution, abundance, and diversity of the vector tick community using fine scale temporal surveys over two seasons (2014 and 2015) across coastal and inland regions of Santa Barbara County, CA. We also characterize patterns of seasonal activity of the more common vector species to understand seasonality in risk of vector exposure, and specifically focus on human encounter risk using standardized tick drags as our method of collection. Leveraging plot-level habitat and abiotic variables in partial least squares regression analysis, we find the seven different vector species collected in this study have divergent drivers of activity and abundance. For example, I. pacificus is strongly associated with dense forest habitats and cool and moist microclimates, while Dermacentor occidentalis and Dermacentor variabilis, competent vectors of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, were found to be more tolerant of higher average temperatures and more open habitats. These results suggest that I. pacificus may be expected to experience reductions in geographic distribution and seasonal activity under projected land cover and climate change in coastal southern California, while D. occidentalis may experience more limited effects. We discuss implications for changing tick-borne disease risk associated with pathogens transmitted by Ixodes as well as Dermacentor species ticks in the western US, and contrast these predictions with eastern North America.
蜱虫和蚊子等媒介物种的分布、丰度和季节性活动是决定媒介传播疾病风险的关键因素,并且强烈受到非生物和栖息地条件的影响。尽管北美的西海岸人口众多,有许多蜱虫媒介物种,但除了太平洋硬蜱(Ixodes pacificus)外,其他蜱虫媒介物种的季节性活动模式以及分布和丰度的精细尺度驱动因素都没有得到很好的描述,特别是在加利福尼亚南部人口密集的地区。这种知识的缺乏既抑制了科学理解,也妨碍了为尽量减少人类接触媒介和病原体传播风险而开展的公共卫生工作。在这里,我们通过在加利福尼亚州圣巴巴拉县沿海和内陆地区进行两个季节(2014 年和 2015 年)的精细时间调查,描述了媒介蜱虫群落分布、丰度和多样性的非生物和栖息地驱动因素,从而填补了这一空白。我们还描述了更常见媒介物种的季节性活动模式,以了解媒介暴露风险的季节性,并特别关注使用标准化蜱虫拖曳作为收集方法的人类遭遇风险。利用部分最小二乘回归分析中的斑块级栖息地和非生物变量,我们发现本研究中收集的七种不同的媒介物种具有不同的活动和丰度驱动因素。例如,太平洋硬蜱与茂密的森林栖息地和凉爽潮湿的小气候密切相关,而西部黑肩硬蜱(Dermacentor occidentalis)和美洲钝缘蜱(Dermacentor variabilis)是落矶山斑点热的有效媒介,它们更能耐受较高的平均温度和更开放的栖息地。这些结果表明,在加利福尼亚州南部沿海地区,预计太平洋硬蜱的地理分布和季节性活动将减少,而西部黑肩硬蜱的活动可能受到的限制较小。我们讨论了与在美国西部传播的立克次体以及 Dermacentor 属蜱虫相关的蜱传疾病风险变化的影响,并将这些预测与北美东部进行了对比。