Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics and Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA.
Dipartimento di Elettronica, Informazione e Bioingegneria, Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy.
Ecol Lett. 2024 Feb;27(2):e14386. doi: 10.1111/ele.14386.
Outbreaks and spread of infectious diseases are often associated with seasonality and environmental changes, including global warming. Free-living stages of soil-transmitted helminths are highly susceptible to climatic drivers; however, how multiple climatic variables affect helminth species, and the long-term consequences of these interactions, is poorly understood. We used experiments on nine trichostrongylid species of herbivores to develop a temperature- and humidity-dependent model of infection hazard, which was then implemented at the European scale under climate change scenarios. Intestinal and stomach helminths exhibited contrasting climatic responses, with the former group strongly affected by temperature while the latter primarily impacted by humidity. Among the demographic traits, larval survival heavily modulated the infection hazard. According to the specific climatic responses of the two groups, climate change is expected to generate differences in the seasonal and spatial shifts of the infection hazard and group co-circulation. In the future, an intensification of these trends could create new opportunities for species range expansion and co-occurrence at European central-northern latitudes.
传染病的爆发和传播通常与季节性和环境变化有关,包括全球变暖。土壤传播性蠕虫的自由生活阶段对气候驱动因素高度敏感;然而,多种气候变量如何影响蠕虫物种,以及这些相互作用的长期后果,还知之甚少。我们使用了九种食草动物的旋毛虫物种的实验,开发了一种感染危险的温度和湿度依赖性模型,然后在气候变化情景下在欧洲范围内实施。肠道和胃蠕虫表现出相反的气候响应,前者受温度强烈影响,而后者主要受湿度影响。在人口特征中,幼虫存活率严重调节感染危险。根据这两个群体的特定气候反应,预计气候变化将导致感染危险和群体共同循环的季节性和空间变化产生差异。未来,这些趋势的加剧可能会为物种在欧洲中北部纬度地区的范围扩大和共存创造新的机会。