Landscape-Scale Epidemiological Dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 in White-Tailed Deer

Author:

Hewitt Joshua1ORCID,Wilson-Henjum Grete1ORCID,Collins Derek T.2ORCID,Linder Timothy J.2ORCID,Lenoch Julianna B.2ORCID,Heale Jonathon D.3,Quintanal Christopher A.4ORCID,Pleszewski Robert4ORCID,McBride Dillon S.5ORCID,Bowman Andrew S.5ORCID,Chandler Jeffrey C.4ORCID,Shriner Susan A.6ORCID,Bevins Sarah N.2ORCID,Kohler Dennis J.2ORCID,Chipman Richard B.3ORCID,Gosser Allen L.3,Bergman David L.3ORCID,DeLiberto Thomas J.3ORCID,Pepin Kim M.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Wildland Resources, Utah State University, Logan, UT, USA

2. National Wildlife Disease Program, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO, USA

3. Wildlife Services, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO, USA

4. Wildlife Disease Diagnostic Laboratory, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO, USA

5. Veterinary Preventive Medicine, The Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine, Columbus, OH, USA

6. National Wildlife Research Center, United States Department of Agriculture, Fort Collins, CO, USA

Abstract

Understanding pathogen emergence in new host species is fundamental for developing prevention and response plans for human and animal health. We leveraged a large-scale surveillance dataset coordinated by United States Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service and State Natural Resources Agencies to quantify the outbreak dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 in North American white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus; WTD) throughout its range in the United States. Local epidemics in WTD were well approximated by a single-outbreak peak followed by fade out. Outbreaks peaked early in the northeast and mid-Atlantic. Local effective reproduction ratios of SARS-CoV-2 were between 1 and 2.5. Ten percent of variability in peak prevalence was explained by human infection pressure. This, together with the similar peak infection prevalence times across many counties and single-peak outbreak dynamics followed by fade out, suggest that widespread transmission via human-to-deer spillover may have been an important driver of the patterns and persistence. We provide a framework for inferring population-level epidemiological processes through joint analysis of many sparsely observed local outbreaks (landscape-scale surveillance data) and linking epidemiological parameters to ecological risk factors. The framework combines mechanistic and statistical models that can identify and track local outbreaks in long-term infection surveillance monitoring data.

Funder

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Reference43 articles.

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3. Multiple spillovers from humans and onward transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in white-tailed deer;S. V. Kuchipudi;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,2022

4. White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) may serve as a wildlife reservoir for nearly extinct SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern;L. C. Caserta;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,2023

5. Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in the wild white-tailed deer in the United States;A. Feng;Nature Communications,2023

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