Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.
Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study, Department of Population Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2020 Jul;26(7):3799-3808. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15095. Epub 2020 Apr 27.
Bluetongue virus and epizootic hemorrhagic disease (HD) virus are globally distributed, vector-borne viruses that infect and cause disease in domestic and wild ruminant species. The forces driving increases in resulting HD may be linked to weather conditions and increasing severity has been noted in northerly latitudes. We evaluated the role of drought severity in both space and time on changes in HD reports across the eastern United States for a recent 15 year period. The objectives of this study were to: (a) develop a spatiotemporal model to evaluate if drought severity explains changing patterns of HD presence; and (b) determine whether this potential risk factor varies in importance over the present range of HD in the eastern United States. Historic data (2000-2014) from an annual HD presence-absence survey conducted by the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study and from the United States Drought Monitor were used for this analysis. For every county in 23 states and for each of 15 years, data were based on reported drought status for August, wetland cover, the physiographic region, and the status of HD in the previous year. We used a generalized linear mixed model to explain HD presence and evaluated spatiotemporal predictors across the region. We found that drought severity was a significant predictor of HD presence and the significance of this relationship was dependent on latitude. In more northerly latitudes, where immunological naivety is most likely, we demonstrated the increasing strength of drought severity as a determinant of reported HD and established the importance of variation in drought severity as a risk factor over the present range of HD in the eastern United States. Our research provides spatially explicit evidence for the link between climate forces and emerging disease patterns across latitude for a globally distributed disease.
蓝舌病病毒和流行性出血热(EHD)病毒是在全球范围内分布的、以媒介为传播途径的病毒,它们感染和引起家养和野生反刍动物物种的疾病。导致 EHD 增加的因素可能与天气条件有关,并且在较北的纬度地区已经注意到严重程度的增加。我们评估了在过去 15 年期间,美国东部干旱严重程度在空间和时间上对 EHD 报告变化的作用。本研究的目的是:(a)建立一个时空模型,以评估干旱严重程度是否可以解释 EHD 存在模式的变化;(b)确定这种潜在的风险因素在美国东部当前 EHD 范围内的重要性是否有所不同。本分析使用了东南合作野生动物疾病研究进行的年度 EHD 存在-不存在调查以及美国干旱监测的历史数据(2000-2014 年)。对于 23 个州的每个县以及 15 年中的每一年,数据都是基于当年 8 月报告的干旱状况、湿地覆盖、地貌区域以及前一年的 EHD 状况。我们使用广义线性混合模型来解释 EHD 的存在,并评估了整个地区的时空预测因子。我们发现干旱严重程度是 EHD 存在的一个重要预测因子,而这种关系的重要性取决于纬度。在较北的纬度地区,免疫幼稚性最有可能存在,我们证明了干旱严重程度作为报告 EHD 的决定因素的强度不断增加,并确定了干旱严重程度的变化作为美国东部当前 EHD 范围内的风险因素的重要性。我们的研究为一种在全球范围内分布的疾病在纬度范围内提供了气候力量与新兴疾病模式之间联系的空间明确证据。