Bats are important reservoirs for emerging infectious diseases, yet the mechanisms that allow highly virulent pathogens to persist within bat populations remain obscure. In Latin America, vampire-bat-transmitted rabies virus represents a key example of how such uncertainty can impede efforts to prevent cross-species transmission. Despite decades of agricultural and human health losses, control efforts have had limited success. To establish persistence mechanisms of vampire-bat-transmitted rabies virus in Latin America, we use data from a spatially replicated, longitudinal field study of vampire bats in Peru to parameterize a series of mechanistic transmission models. We find that single-colony persistence cannot occur. Instead, dispersal of bats between colonies, combined with a high frequency of immunizing nonlethal infections, is necessary to maintain rabies virus at levels consistent with field observations. Simulations show that the strong spatial component to transmission dynamics could explain the failure of bat culls to eliminate rabies and suggests that geographic coordination of control efforts might reduce transmission to humans and domestic animals. These findings offer spatial dynamics as a mechanism for rabies persistence in bats that might be important for the understanding and control of other bat-borne pathogens.
Rabies virus persistence in vampire bats in Peru requires bat dispersal between colonies and frequent immunizing nonlethal infections, supporting spatial and immune mechanisms underlying reservoir maintenance.
We find that single-colony persistence cannot occur. Instead, dispersal of bats between colonies, combined with a high frequency of immunizing nonlethal infections, is necessary to maintain rabies virus at levels consistent with field observations.
Method
longitudinal field study; mechanistic transmission modeling
Geographic raw
Peru
Country inferred
Peru
Spillover Event1 records
Spillover EventExtraction confidence 0.75
Key finding
Rabies virus transmitted by vampire bats in Latin America causes infections in humans and domestic animals, illustrating documented spillover from bats to humans and animals.
In Latin America, vampire-bat-transmitted rabies virus represents a key example of how such uncertainty can impede efforts to prevent cross-species transmission. Simulations show that the strong spatial component to transmission dynamics could explain the failure of bat culls to eliminate rabies and suggests that geographic coordination of control efforts might reduce transmission to humans and domestic animals.
Method
longitudinal field study; mechanistic transmission models
Study design
field surveillance
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Latin America
Zoonotic Surveillance1 records
Zoonotic SurveillanceExtraction confidence 0.90
Key finding
Longitudinal field surveillance of vampire bats in Peru provided data on rabies virus persistence and spatial transmission dynamics.
Henipavirus Ecology Research Group (HERG) Agricultural intensification, priming for persistence and the emergence of Nipah virus: A lethal bat-borne zoonosis
Ecological and epidemiological aspects of attacks by vampire bats in relation to paralytic rabies in Argentina, and an analysis of proposals for control