Predictive Thresholds for Plague in Kazakhstan

Author:

Davis Stephen12345,Begon Mike12345,De Bruyn Luc12345,Ageyev Vladimir S.12345,Klassovskiy Nikolay L.12345,Pole Sergey B.12345,Viljugrein Hildegunn12345,Stenseth Nils Chr.12345,Leirs Herwig12345

Affiliation:

1. Danish Pest Infestation Laboratory, Skovbrynet 14, DK-2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark.

2. Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Groenenborgerlaan 171, B-2020 Antwerp, Belgium.

3. Centre for Comparative Infectious Diseases and Population and Evolutionary Biology Research Group, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Liverpool, Liverpool, L69 3BX, UK.

4. Institute of Nature Conservation, Kliniekstraat 25, 1070 Brussels, Belgium.

5. M. Aikimbaev's Kazakh Scientific Center for Quarantine and Zoonotic Diseases, 14 Kapalskaya Street, Almaty 480074, Republic of Kazakhstan.

Abstract

In Kazakhstan and elsewhere in central Asia, the bacterium Yersinia pestis circulates in natural populations of gerbils, which are the source of human cases of bubonic plague. Our analysis of field data collected between 1955 and 1996 shows that plague invades, fades out, and reinvades in response to fluctuations in the abundance of its main reservoir host, the great gerbil ( Rhombomys opimus ). This is a rare empirical example of the two types of abundance thresholds for infectious disease—invasion and persistence— operating in a single wildlife population. We parameterized predictive models that should reduce the costs of plague surveillance in central Asia and thereby encourage its continuance.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference21 articles.

1. E. Tikhomirov, in Plague Manual: Epidemiology, Distribution, Surveillance and Control (World Health Organization, Geneva, 1999), pp. 11–41.

2. Ecology of Infectious Diseases in Natural Populations 1995

3. The Ecology of Wildlife Diseases 2002

4. Infectious Diseases of Humans 1991

5. Persistence thresholds for phocine distemper virus infection in harbour seal Phoca vitulina metapopulations

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