模拟寄主扩散和水传播对病原体在复杂地貌中传播的综合影响。

Adam N Akullian, Ding Lu, Julia Z McDowell, George M Davis, Robert C Spear, Justin V Remais
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摘要

环境模型通常用于解决化学危害的归宿和迁移问题,最近在追踪某些环境病原体的上游污染源方面也变得非常重要。这些工具,如应用于地表水污染物的一阶衰变模型,有望量化具有多个环境阶段和/或多个宿主的病原体的归宿和迁移,以及那些环境阶段完全通过水传播的病原体。在此,我们考虑了人类血吸虫日本血吸虫的归宿和迁移能力,该病原体有两个水传播阶段,并由两栖中间宿主蜗牛携带。我们通过实验得出了中间蜗牛宿主的扩散估计值,以及carcariae(寄生虫的水传播阶段,即人类感染阶段)被动下游扩散的命运和运输估计值。利用一维平流输运模型(表现出一阶性衰减),我们模拟了扩散的蜗牛宿主为下游地点带来的新增空间范围和carcarial浓度的相对增加。模拟结果表明,相对于没有蜗牛散播的情况,蜗牛散播会大大增加到达下游地点的蛔虫浓度,从而有效地增加了原本与世隔绝的下游地点接触上游来源蛔虫的风险。本文所建立的模型可应用于其他具有多个生命阶段和宿主的传染病,并对有针对性地控制疾病传播的生态学研究具有重要意义。
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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Modeling the combined influence of host dispersal and waterborne fate and transport on pathogen spread in complex landscapes.

Environmental models, often applied to questions on the fate and transport of chemical hazards, have recently become important in tracing certain environmental pathogens to their upstream sources of contamination. These tools, such as first order decay models applied to contaminants in surface waters, offer promise for quantifying the fate and transport of pathogens with multiple environmental stages and/or multiple hosts, in addition to those pathogens whose environmental stages are entirely waterborne. Here we consider the fate and transport capabilities of the human schistosome Schistosoma japonicum, which exhibits two waterborne stages and is carried by an amphibious intermediate snail host. We present experimentally-derived dispersal estimates for the intermediate snail host and fate and transport estimates for the passive downstream diffusion of cercariae, the waterborne, human-infective parasite stage. Using a one dimensional advective transport model exhibiting first-order decay, we simulate the added spatial reach and relative increase in cercarial concentrations that dispersing snail hosts contribute to downstream sites. Simulation results suggest that snail dispersal can substantially increase the concentrations of cercariae reaching downstream locations, relative to no snail dispersal, effectively putting otherwise isolated downstream sites at increased risk of exposure to cercariae from upstream sources. The models developed here can be applied to other infectious diseases with multiple life-stages and hosts, and have important implications for targeted ecological control of disease spread.

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