There Goes the Neighbourhood-A Multi-City Study Reveals Ticks and Tick-Borne Pathogens Commonly Occupy Urban Green Spaces.

IF 2.4 2区 农林科学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Zoonoses and Public Health Pub Date : 2025-01-16 DOI:10.1111/zph.13208
Jani J Sormunen, Satu Kylänpää, Ella Sippola, Riikka Elo, Nosheen Kiran, Veli-Matti Pakanen, Eva R Kallio, Eero J Vesterinen, Tero Klemola
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Abstract

Introduction: Humans acquire tick-borne pathogens (TBPs) from infected ticks contacted during outdoor activities. Outdoor activity is at its highest in urban green spaces, where the presence of tick populations has increasingly been observed. Consequently, more insight into factors influencing the presence of ticks therein is needed. Here, we assess the occurrence of ticks and several TBPs in urban green spaces in Finland, estimate related human hazard and assess how landscape features influence tick and TBP occurrence therein.

Methods: Ticks collected from five cities during 2019-2020 were utilised. Borrelia, Rickettsia, Neoehrlichia mikurensis, Anaplasma phagocytophilum, Babesia and TBEV were screened from ticks using qPCR. Various landscape features were calculated and utilised in generalised linear mixed models to assess their contribution towards tick and TBP occurrence in green spaces. Finally, human population density proximate to each study site was calculated and used to create population-weighted risk indices.

Results: Borrelia were the most common pathogens detected, with 22% of nymphs and 43% of adults infected. Increasing forest cover had a positive effect on the densities of nymphs and adults, whereas forest size had a negative effect. Middling percentages of artificial surfaces predicted higher nymph densities than low or high values. Human population-weighted risk estimates were highly varied, even within cities. A positive correlation was observed between total city population and risk indices.

Conclusions: Ticks and TBPs are commonplace in urban green spaces in Finland. Enzootic cycles for Borrelia and Rickettsia appear to be well maintained within cities, leading to widespread risk of infection therein. Our results suggest that nymph densities are highest in urban forests of medium size, whereas small or large forests show reduced densities. Green spaces of roughly similar risk can be found in cities of different sizes, emphasising that the identification of areas of particularly high hazard is important for effective mitigation actions.

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一项多城市的研究表明,蜱虫和蜱传病原体通常占据城市绿地。
人类在户外活动中接触受感染的蜱虫,获得蜱传病原体(TBPs)。户外活动在城市绿地中最为频繁,人们越来越多地观察到蜱虫种群的存在。因此,需要更深入地了解影响蜱虫存在的因素。本文评估了芬兰城市绿地中蜱虫和几种TBP的发生情况,估计了相关的人类危害,并评估了景观特征如何影响其中蜱虫和TBP的发生。方法:利用2019-2020年在全国5个城市采集的蜱虫。采用qPCR方法从蜱体中筛选出伯氏体、立克次体、米库伦新埃尔希体、嗜吞噬细胞无形体、巴贝斯虫和TBEV。在广义线性混合模型中,计算并利用各种景观特征来评估它们对绿地中蜱虫和TBP发生的贡献。最后,计算每个研究点附近的人口密度,并使用该密度创建人口加权风险指数。结果:伯氏疏螺旋体是最常见的致病菌,有22%的若虫和43%的成人感染。增加森林覆盖对若虫和成虫密度有积极影响,而森林面积对若虫和成虫密度有消极影响。中等百分比的人造表面预测若虫密度高于低或高百分比。即使在城市内,人口加权风险估计也存在很大差异。城市人口总数与风险指数呈正相关。结论:蜱虫和TBPs在芬兰城市绿地中普遍存在。伯氏疏螺旋体和立克次体的地方性动物循环似乎在城市内保持良好,导致城市内广泛存在感染风险。结果表明,若虫密度在中等规模的城市森林中最高,而小森林或大森林的若虫密度则降低。在不同规模的城市中可以找到风险大致相似的绿地,这强调了确定特别高危险的地区对于有效的减灾行动非常重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Zoonoses and Public Health
Zoonoses and Public Health 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
4.20%
发文量
115
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Zoonoses and Public Health brings together veterinary and human health researchers and policy-makers by providing a venue for publishing integrated and global approaches to zoonoses and public health. The Editors will consider papers that focus on timely collaborative and multi-disciplinary research in zoonoses and public health. This journal provides rapid publication of original papers, reviews, and potential discussion papers embracing this collaborative spirit. Papers should advance the scientific knowledge of the sources, transmission, prevention and control of zoonoses and be authored by scientists with expertise in areas such as microbiology, virology, parasitology and epidemiology. Articles that incorporate recent data into new methods, applications, or approaches (e.g. statistical modeling) which enhance public health are strongly encouraged.
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Issue Information Potential Zoonotic Infections Transmitted by Free-Ranging Macaques in Human-Monkey Conflict Areas in Thailand. Clinical and Epidemiologic Review of Capnocytophaga Spp. Infections Identified at a Public Health Reference Laboratory-California, 2005-2021. A Special Insight on the Causal Agents and Mode of Occurrence of Japanese Encephalitis (JE) Infections in Rural Regions of Assam, India. There Goes the Neighbourhood-A Multi-City Study Reveals Ticks and Tick-Borne Pathogens Commonly Occupy Urban Green Spaces.
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