The Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom.
South African Equine Health & Protocols NPC, Paardevlei, Cape Town, South Africa.
PLoS One. 2019 Oct 31;14(10):e0222366. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0222366. eCollection 2019.
African horse sickness (AHS) is a disease of equids that results in a non-tariff barrier to the trade of live equids from affected countries. AHS is endemic in South Africa except for a controlled area in the Western Cape Province (WCP) where sporadic outbreaks have occurred in the past 2 decades. There is potential that the presence of zebra populations, thought to be the natural reservoir hosts for AHS, in the WCP could maintain AHS virus circulation in the area and act as a year-round source of infection for horses. However, it remains unclear whether the epidemiology or the ecological conditions present in the WCP would enable persistent circulation of AHS in the local zebra populations. Here we developed a hybrid deterministic-stochastic vector-host compartmental model of AHS transmission in plains zebra (Equus quagga), where host populations are age- and sex-structured and for which population and AHS transmission dynamics are modulated by rainfall and temperature conditions. Using this model, we showed that populations of plains zebra present in the WCP are not sufficiently large for AHS introduction events to become endemic and that coastal populations of zebra need to be >2500 individuals for AHS to persist >2 years, even if zebras are infectious for more than 50 days. AHS cannot become endemic in the coastal population of the WCP unless the zebra population involves at least 50,000 individuals. Finally, inland populations of plains zebra in the WCP may represent a risk for AHS to persist but would require populations of at least 500 zebras or show unrealistic duration of infectiousness for AHS introduction events to become endemic. Our results provide evidence that the risk of AHS persistence from a single introduction event in a given plains zebra population in the WCP is extremely low and it is unlikely to represent a long-term source of infection for local horses.
非洲马瘟(AHS)是一种马属动物疾病,会对来自疫区的活体马属动物贸易造成非关税壁垒。南非全境流行 AHS,但西开普省(WCP)有一个受控制的地区除外,在过去 20 年中,该地区曾零星爆发过 AHS。WCP 可能存在斑驴种群,而斑驴被认为是 AHS 的自然宿主,它们的存在可能使 AHS 病毒在该地区持续循环,并成为马匹全年感染的来源。然而,目前尚不清楚 WCP 中存在的流行病学或生态条件是否会使 AHS 在当地斑驴种群中持续循环。在这里,我们建立了一个平原斑马(Equus quagga)中 AHS 传播的混合确定性-随机向量-宿主 compartmental 模型,其中宿主种群按年龄和性别结构划分,并且宿主种群和 AHS 传播动态受到降雨和温度条件的调节。利用该模型,我们表明,WCP 中存在的平原斑马种群数量不足以使 AHS 引入事件成为地方性疾病,并且斑马沿海种群需要 >2500 个体才能使 AHS 持续存在 >2 年,即使斑马的传染性超过 50 天。除非斑马种群涉及至少 5 万头个体,否则 AHS 无法在 WCP 的沿海斑马种群中成为地方性疾病。最后,WCP 内陆平原斑马种群可能会对 AHS 的持续存在构成威胁,但需要至少 500 头斑马的种群,或者显示出不切实际的 AHS 引入事件传染性持续时间,才能使 AHS 成为地方性疾病。我们的研究结果表明,在 WCP 特定平原斑马种群中,单次引入事件导致 AHS 持续存在的风险极低,不太可能成为当地马匹的长期感染源。