Author:
RANDOLPH S. E.,MIKLISOVÁ D.,LYSY J.,ROGERS D. J.,LABUDA M.
Abstract
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus has a highly focal distribution
through Eurasia. Endemic cycles appear to depend
on the transmission of non-systemic infections between ticks co-feeding
on the same rodent hosts. The particular features
of seasonal dynamics and infestation patterns of larval and nymphal Ixodes
ricinus, but not Dermacentor reticulatus, from
4 regions within TBE foci in Slovakia, are such as to promote TBE virus
transmission. The distributions of larvae and
nymphs on their principal rodent hosts are highly aggregated and, rather
than being independent, the distributions of each
stage are coincident so that the same ca. 20% of hosts feed about
three-quarters of both larvae and nymphs. This results
in twice the number of infectible larvae feeding alongside potentially
infected nymphs compared with the null hypothesis
of independent distributions. Overall, co-feeding transmission under these
circumstances brings the reproductive number
(R0) for TBE virus to a level that accounts quantitatively
for maintained endemic cycles. Essential for coincident aggregated
distributions of larvae and nymphs is their synchronous seasonal activity.
Preliminary comparisons support the prediction
of a greater degree of coincident seasonality within recorded TBE foci
than outside. This identifies the particular climatic
factors that permit such patterns of tick seasonal dynamics as the primary
predictors for the focal distribution of TBE.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
275 articles.
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