Alkishe Abdelghafar, Raghavan Ram K, Peterson Andrew T
Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA.
Zoology Department, Faculty of Science, University of Tripoli, Tripoli, Libya.
Insects. 2021 Mar 5;12(3):225. doi: 10.3390/insects12030225.
Ticks rank high among arthropod vectors in terms of numbers of infectious agents that they transmit to humans, including Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Colorado tick fever, human monocytic ehrlichiosis, tularemia, and human granulocytic anaplasmosis. Increasing temperature is suspected to affect tick biting rates and pathogen developmental rates, thereby potentially increasing risk for disease incidence. Tick distributions respond to climate change, but how their geographic ranges will shift in future decades and how those shifts may translate into changes in disease incidence remain unclear. In this study, we have assembled correlative ecological niche models for eight tick species of medical or veterinary importance in North America (, , , , , , , and ), assessing the distributional potential of each under both present and future climatic conditions. Our goal was to assess whether and how species' distributions will likely shift in coming decades in response to climate change. We interpret these patterns in terms of likely implications for tick-associated diseases in North America.
蜱虫在向人类传播传染病原体的节肢动物媒介中排名靠前,这些病原体包括莱姆病、落基山斑疹热、科罗拉多蜱传热、人类单核细胞埃立克体病、兔热病和人类粒细胞无形体病。气温上升被怀疑会影响蜱虫的叮咬率和病原体发育率,从而可能增加疾病发病率的风险。蜱虫的分布会对气候变化做出反应,但在未来几十年它们的地理分布范围将如何变化,以及这些变化如何转化为疾病发病率的变化仍不清楚。在这项研究中,我们构建了北美八种具有医学或兽医学重要性的蜱虫物种([蜱虫名称1]、[蜱虫名称2]、[蜱虫名称3]、[蜱虫名称4]、[蜱虫名称5]、[蜱虫名称6]、[蜱虫名称7]和[蜱虫名称8])的相关生态位模型,评估了每种蜱虫在当前和未来气候条件下的分布潜力。我们的目标是评估未来几十年物种分布是否以及如何可能因气候变化而发生变化。我们从这些模式对北美蜱虫相关疾病的可能影响方面进行解读。