Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University , East Lansing, MI 48824, USA.
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul , MN 55108, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2024 Oct 21;379(1912):20220532. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0532. Epub 2024 Sep 4.
Social and spatial structures of host populations play important roles in pathogen transmission. For environmentally transmitted pathogens, the host space use interacts with both the host social structure and the pathogen's environmental persistence (which determines the time-lag across which two hosts can transmit). Together, these factors shape the epidemiological dynamics of environmentally transmitted pathogens. While the importance of both social and spatial structures and environmental pathogen persistence has long been recognized in epidemiology, they are often considered separately. A better understanding of how these factors interact to determine disease dynamics is required for developing robust surveillance and management strategies. Here, we use a simple agent-based model where we vary host mobility (spatial), host gregariousness (social) and pathogen decay (environmental persistence), each from low to high levels to uncover how they affect epidemiological dynamics. By comparing epidemic peak, time to epidemic peak and final epidemic size, we show that longer infectious periods, higher group mobility, larger group size and longer pathogen persistence lead to larger, faster growing outbreaks, and explore how these processes interact to determine epidemiological outcomes such as the epidemic peak and the final epidemic size. We identify general principles that can be used for planning surveillance and control for wildlife host-pathogen systems with environmental transmission across a range of spatial behaviour, social structure and pathogen decay rates. This article is part of the theme issue 'The spatial-social interface: a theoretical and empirical integration'.
宿主群体的社会和空间结构在病原体传播中起着重要作用。对于环境传播的病原体,宿主的空间利用与宿主的社会结构和病原体的环境持久性(决定了两个宿主可以传播的时间滞后)相互作用。这些因素共同塑造了环境传播病原体的流行病学动态。尽管宿主的社会和空间结构以及环境病原体持久性的重要性在流行病学中早已得到认可,但它们通常是分开考虑的。为了制定有效的监测和管理策略,需要更好地了解这些因素如何相互作用来确定疾病动态。在这里,我们使用一个简单的基于代理的模型,在该模型中,我们从低到高分别改变宿主的移动性(空间)、宿主的群居性(社会)和病原体的衰减(环境持久性),以揭示它们如何影响流行病学动态。通过比较流行病高峰、达到高峰的时间和最终流行病规模,我们表明,更长的传染期、更高的群体流动性、更大的群体规模和更长的病原体持久性会导致更大、更快增长的疫情爆发,并探讨这些过程如何相互作用来确定流行病高峰和最终流行病规模等流行病学结果。我们确定了一些一般原则,可用于规划具有环境传播的野生动物宿主-病原体系统的监测和控制,这些系统具有一系列的空间行为、社会结构和病原体衰减率。本文是主题为“空间-社会界面:理论和经验综合”的特刊的一部分。