The landscape configuration of zoonotic transmission of Ebola virus disease in West and Central Africa: interaction between population density and vegetation cover.
Michael G Walsh1
Ma Haseeb2,3
Affiliations3 institutions
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, State University of New York , Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY , USA.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, State University of New York , Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY , USA
Departments of Cell Biology, Pathology and Medicine, College of Medicine, State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center , Brooklyn, NY , USA.
Ebola virus disease (EVD) is an emerging infectious disease of zoonotic origin that has been responsible for high mortality and significant social disruption in West and Central Africa. Zoonotic transmission of EVD requires contact between susceptible human hosts and the reservoir species for Ebolaviruses, which are believed to be fruit bats. Nevertheless, features of the landscape that may facilitate such points of contact have not yet been adequately identified. Nor have spatial dependencies between zoonotic EVD transmission and landscape structures been delineated. This investigation sought to describe the spatial relationship between zoonotic EVD transmission events, or spillovers, and population density and vegetation cover. An inhomogeneous Poisson process model was fitted to all precisely geolocated zoonotic transmissions of EVD in West and Central Africa. Population density was strongly associated with spillover; however, there was significant interaction between population density and green vegetation cover. In areas of very low population density, increasing vegetation cover was associated with a decrease in risk of zoonotic transmission, but as population density increased in a given area, increasing vegetation cover was associated with increased risk of zoonotic transmission. This study showed that the spatial dependencies of Ebolavirus spillover were associated with the distribution of population density and vegetation cover in the landscape, even after controlling for climate and altitude. While this is an observational study, and thus precludes direct causal inference, the findings do highlight areas that may be at risk for zoonotic EVD transmission based on the spatial configuration of important features of the landscape.
Ebolavirus spillover risk in West and Central Africa was associated with the interaction of population density and vegetation cover, suggesting landscape features influence contact with fruit bat reservoirs.
Zoonotic transmission of EVD requires contact between susceptible human hosts and the reservoir species for Ebolaviruses, which are believed to be fruit bats. This investigation sought to describe the spatial relationship between zoonotic EVD transmission events and population density and vegetation cover in West and Central Africa.
Method
inhomogeneous Poisson process model; spatial analysis
Geographic raw
West and Central Africa
Spillover Event1 records
Spillover EventExtraction confidence 0.97
Key finding
Ebolavirus spillover events occurred from fruit bats to humans in West and Central Africa, with spatial patterns influenced by population density and vegetation cover.
An inhomogeneous Poisson process model was fitted to all precisely geolocated zoonotic transmissions of EVD in West and Central Africa. Zoonotic transmission of EVD requires contact between susceptible human hosts and the reservoir species for Ebolaviruses, which are believed to be fruit bats.
Method
spatial analysis; Poisson process modeling
Study design
observational study
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
West and Central Africa
Zoonotic Surveillance1 records
Zoonotic SurveillanceExtraction confidence 0.70
Key finding
Spatial analysis of geolocated Ebola virus disease spillovers in West and Central Africa revealed associations between spillover risk, population density, and vegetation cover.