Villalobos-Segura María Del Carmen, Rico-Chávez Oscar, Suzán Gerardo, Chaves Andrea
Laboratorio de Ecología de Enfermedades y Una Salud, Facultad de Medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México City, México.
Escuela de Biología, Universidad de Costa Rica, San José, Costa Rica.
Vet Med Sci. 2025 Jan;11(1):e70160. doi: 10.1002/vms3.70160.
Among pathogens associated with mammals, numerous viruses with a direct transmission route impact human, domestic and wild species health. Host and landscape factors affect viral infection and transmission dynamics of these viruses, along with barriers to host dispersal and gene exchange. However, studies show biases toward certain locations, hosts and detected pathogens, with regional variations in similar host-virus associations.
Using a systematic review, in two electronic repositories for articles published until December 2022, we analysed the available information on host- and landscape-associated factors influencing the infection and transmission of directly transmitted viruses in mammals.
In the analysis, about 50% of papers examined either host traits, landscape composition or configuration measures, while approximately 24% combined host and landscape-associated factors. Additionally, approximately 17% of the articles included climatic data and 30% integrated factors related to anthropogenic impact, as these variables have a role in host density, distribution and virus persistence. The most significant and frequent host traits used as predictor variables were sex, age, body weight, host density and species identity. Land cover was the most evaluated landscape attribute, while some explored configuration variables like edge density and fragmentation indexes. Finally, temperature, precipitation and features such as human population density and human footprint index were also typically measured and found impactful.
Given the many contributions host- and landscape-related factors have in pathogen dynamics, this systematic study contributes to a better knowledge of host-virus dynamics and the identification of variables and gaps that can be used for disease prevention.
在与哺乳动物相关的病原体中,许多具有直接传播途径的病毒会影响人类、家畜和野生动物的健康。宿主和景观因素会影响这些病毒的感染和传播动态,以及宿主扩散和基因交换的障碍。然而,研究表明存在对某些地点、宿主和检测到的病原体的偏向性,在相似的宿主-病毒关联中存在区域差异。
通过系统综述,在两个截至2022年12月发表文章的电子数据库中,我们分析了有关影响哺乳动物中直接传播病毒感染和传播的宿主及景观相关因素的现有信息。
在分析中,约50%的论文研究了宿主特征、景观组成或结构指标,约24%的论文综合了宿主和景观相关因素。此外,约17%的文章纳入了气候数据,30%的文章纳入了与人为影响相关的因素,因为这些变量在宿主密度、分布和病毒持久性方面发挥作用。用作预测变量的最显著且最常见的宿主特征是性别、年龄、体重、宿主密度和物种身份。土地覆盖是评估最多的景观属性,而一些研究探讨了边缘密度和破碎化指数等结构变量。最后,温度、降水以及人口密度和人类足迹指数等特征也通常被测量且发现具有影响力。
鉴于宿主和景观相关因素在病原体动态中具有诸多作用,这项系统研究有助于更好地了解宿主-病毒动态,并确定可用于疾病预防的变量和差距。