Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16716
Título: Predicting Yellow Fever Through Species Distribution Modeling of Virus, Vector, and Monkeys
Autor: Almeida, Marco Antônio Barreto de
dos Santos, Edmilson
Cardoso, Jáder da Cruz
Silva, L. G. da
Rabelo, Rafael M.
Bicca-Marques, Júlio César
Palavras-chave: Animals
Brasil
Ecosystem
Epidemiology
Haplorhini
Isolation And Purification
Mosquito Vector
Risk Factor
Season
Veterinary Medicine
Virology
Yellow Fever
Yellow Fever Virus
Animal
Brasil
Ecosystem
Haplorhini
Mosquito Vectors
Risk Factors
Seasons
Yellow Fever
Yellow Fever Virus
Data do documento: 2019
Revista: EcoHealth
É parte de: Volume 16, Número 1, Pags. 95-108
Abstract: Mapping yellow fever (YF) risk is often based on place of infection of human cases, whereas the circulation between nonhuman primates (NHP) and vectors is neglected. In 2008/2009, YF devastated NHP at the southern limit of the disease in the Americas. In view of the recent expansion of YF in Brazil, we modeled the environmental suitability for YF with data from 2008/2009 epizootic, the distribution of NHP (Alouatta spp.), and the mosquito (Haemagogus leucocelaenus) using the maximum entropy algorithm (Maxent) to define risk areas for YF and their main environmental predictors. We evaluated points of occurrence of YF based on dates of confirmed deaths of NHP in three periods, from October 2008 to: December 2008, March 2009, and June 2009. Variables with greatest influence on suitability for YF were seasonality in water vapor pressure (36%), distribution of NHP (32%), maximum wind speed (11%), annual mean rainfall (7%), and maximum temperature in the warmest month (5%). Models of early periods of the epizootic identified suitability for YF in localities that recorded NHP deaths only months later, demonstrating usefulness of the approach for predicting the disease spread. Our data supported influence of rainfall, air humidity, and ambient temperature on the distribution of epizootics. Wind was highlighted as a predicting variable, probably due to its influence on the dispersal of vectors infected with YF in fragmented landscapes. Further studies on the role of wind are necessary to improve our understanding of the occurrence of YF and other arboviruses and their dispersal in the landscape. © 2018, EcoHealth Alliance.
DOI: 10.1007/s10393-018-1388-4
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