4.0 Article

Modeling freshwater snail habitat suitability and areas of potential snail-borne disease transmission in Uganda

Journal

GEOSPATIAL HEALTH
Volume 1, Issue 1, Pages 93-104

Publisher

UNIV NAPLES FEDERICO II
DOI: 10.4081/gh.2006.284

Keywords

snails; parasites; schistosomiasis; distribution; habitat modeling; remote sensing; geographic information system

Funding

  1. 'WWF Verdensnaturfonden/Novo Nordisk Biodiversitetslegatet'
  2. VILLUM KAHN RASMUSSEN Foundation
  3. Danish Development Research Council

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Geographic information system (GIS)-based modeling of an intermediate host snail species' environmental requirements using known occurence records can provide estimates of its spatial distribution. When other data are lacking, this can be used as a rough spatial prediction of potential snail-borne disease transmission areas. Furthermore, knowledge of abiotic factors affecting intra-molluscan parasitic development can be used to make masks based on remotely sensed climatic data, and these can in turn be used to refine these predictions. We used data from a recent freshwater snail survery from Uganda, environmental data and the genetic algorithm for rule-set prediction (GARP) to map the potential distribution of snail species known to act as intermediate hosts of several human and animal parasites. The results suggest that large areas of Uganda are suitable habitats for many of these snail species, indicating a large potential for disease transmission. The lack of parasitological data still makes it difficult to determine the magnitude of actual disease transmission, but the predicted snail distributions might be used as indicators of potential present and future risk areas. Some of the predicted snail distribution maps were furthermore combined with temperature masks delineating suitable temperature regimes of the parasites they host. This revealed the coinciding suitable areas for snail and parasite, but also areas suitable for host snails, but apparently not for the parasites. Assuming that the developed models correctly reflect areas suitable for transmisson, the applied approach could prove useful for targeting control interventions.

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