4.7 Article

Landscape attributes governing local transmission of an endemic zoonosis: Rabies virus in domestic dogs

期刊

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
卷 27, 期 3, 页码 773-788

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.14470

关键词

domestic dog; endemic zoonotic disease; landscape heterogeneity; phylogeography; rabies; spatial diffusion

资金

  1. Research And Policy for Infectious Diseases Dynamics (RAPIDD) Program of the Science AMP
  2. Technology Directorate, Department of Homeland Security
  3. Wellcome Trust [082715/B/07/Z, 095787/Z/11/Z, 097821/Z/11/Z, 105614/Z/14/Z]
  4. Medical Research Council [G0901135]
  5. MSD Animal Health
  6. Fogarty International Center, National Institute of Health
  7. MRC [G0901135] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Landscape heterogeneity plays an important role in disease spread and persistence, but quantifying landscape influences and their scale dependence is challenging. Studies have focused on how environmental features or global transport networks influence pathogen invasion and spread, but their influence on local transmission dynamics that underpin the persistence of endemic diseases remains unexplored. Bayesian phylogeographic frameworks that incorporate spatial heterogeneities are promising tools for analysing linked epidemiological, environmental and genetic data. Here, we extend these methodological approaches to decipher the relative contribution and scale-dependent effects of landscape influences on the transmission of endemic rabies virus in Serengeti district, Tanzania (area similar to 4,900 km(2)). Utilizing detailed epidemiological data and 152 complete viral genomes collected between 2004 and 2013, we show that the localized presence of dogs but not their density is the most important determinant of diffusion, implying that culling will be ineffective for rabies control. Rivers and roads acted as barriers and facilitators to viral spread, respectively, and vaccination impeded diffusion despite variable annual coverage. Notably, we found that landscape effects were scale-dependent: rivers were barriers and roads facilitators on larger scales, whereas the distribution of dogs was important for rabies dispersal across multiple scales. This nuanced understanding of the spatial processes that underpin rabies transmission can be exploited for targeted control at the scale where it will have the greatest impact. Moreover, this research demonstrates how current phylogeographic frameworks can be adapted to improve our understanding of endemic disease dynamics at different spatial scales.

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