物种丰富度
生物多样性
地理
蜱传脑炎
栖息地
生态学
丰度(生态学)
背景(考古学)
野生动物
负二项分布
传输(电信)
脑炎
生物
泊松分布
统计
电气工程
工程类
病毒学
考古
数学
病毒
作者
Francesca Dagostin,Valentina Tagliapietra,Giancarlo Marini,Giulia Ferrari,Marco Cervellini,William Wint,Neil Alexander,Maria Grazia Zuccali,Silvia Molinaro,Nahuel Fiorito,Timothée Dub,Duccio Rocchini,Annapaola Rizzoli
出处
期刊:One Health
[Elsevier]
日期:2024-06-01
卷期号:18: 100669-100669
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.onehlt.2023.100669
摘要
The natural transmission cycle of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus is enhanced by complex interactions between ticks and key hosts strongly connected to habitat characteristics. The diversity of wildlife host species and their relative abundance is known to affect transmission of tick-borne diseases. Therefore, in the current context of global biodiversity loss, we explored the relationship between habitat richness and the pattern of human TBE cases in Europe to assess biodiversity's role in disease risk mitigation. We assessed human TBE case distribution across 879 European regions using official epidemiological data reported to The European Surveillance System (TESSy) between 2017 and 2021 from 15 countries. We explored the relationship between TBE presence and the habitat richness index (HRI1) by means of binomial regression. We validated our findings at local scale using data collected between 2017 and 2021 in 227 municipalities located in Trento and Belluno provinces, two known TBE foci in northern Italy. Our results showed a significant parabolic effect of HRI on the probability of presence of human TBE cases in the European regions included in our dataset, and a significant, negative effect of HRI on the local presence of TBE in northern Italy. At both spatial scales, TBE risk decreases in areas with higher values of HRI. To our knowledge, no efforts have yet been made to explore the relationship between biodiversity and TBE risk, probably due to the scarcity of high-resolution, large-scale data about the abundance or density of critical host species. Hence, in this study we considered habitat richness as proxy for vertebrate host diversity. The results suggest that in highly diverse habitats TBE risk decreases. Hence, biodiversity loss could enhance TBE risk for both humans and wildlife. This association is relevant to support the hypothesis that the maintenance of highly diverse ecosystems mitigates disease risk.
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