4.7 Article

Predicting the Presence of Leptospires in Rodents from Environmental Indicators Opens Up Opportunities for Environmental Monitoring of Human Leptospirosis

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13020325

Keywords

leptospirosis; rodents; Rattus rattus; Rattus norvegicus; spatial analysis; remote sensing; landscape metrics; satellite; ecology

Funding

  1. FEDER INTERREG V program [LEPTOI 32913]
  2. French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development (IRD)

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A study in Seychelles identified environmental factors correlated with animal reservoirs distribution and Leptospira infection, finding that factors such as rainfall, elevation, and landscape fragmentation were associated with the carriage of leptospires in rats. The model developed could help decision makers implement policies affecting urban landscapes and pest control strategies to reduce human contact with Leptospira-laden rats.
Leptospirosis, an environmental infectious disease of bacterial origin, is the infectious disease with the highest associated mortality in Seychelles. In small island territories, the occurrence of the disease is spatially heterogeneous and a better understanding of the environmental factors that contribute to the presence of the bacteria would help implement targeted control. The present study aimed at identifying the main environmental parameters correlated with animal reservoirs distribution and Leptospira infection in order to delineate habitats with highest prevalence. We used a previously published dataset produced from a large collection of rodents trapped during the dry and wet seasons in most habitats of Mahe, the main island of Seychelles. A land use/land cover analysis was realized in order to describe the various environments using SPOT-5 images by remote sensing (object-based image analysis). At each sampling site, landscape indices were calculated and combined with other geographical parameters together with rainfall records to be used in a multivariate statistical analysis. Several environmental factors were found to be associated with the carriage of leptospires in Rattus rattus and Rattus norvegicus, namely low elevations, fragmented landscapes, the proximity of urbanized areas, an increased distance from forests and, above all, increased precipitation in the three months preceding trapping. The analysis indicated that Leptospira renal carriage could be predicted using the species identification and a description of landscape fragmentation and rainfall, with infection prevalence being positively correlated with these two environmental variables. This model may help decision makers in implementing policies affecting urban landscapes and/or in balancing conservation efforts when designing pest control strategies that should also aim at reducing human contact with Leptospira-laden rats while limiting their impact on the autochthonous fauna.

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