Literature detail

Microclimates Might Limit Indirect Spillover of the Bat Borne Zoonotic Hendra Virus.

Gerardo Martin1 Rebecca J Webb2 Carla Chen3 Raina K Plowright4 Lee F Skerratt2
Affiliations 4 institutions
  1. College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Sciences, One Health Research Group, James Cook University, DB41-106, 1 James Cook Dr, Townsville City, QLD, 4811, Australia. [email protected].
  2. College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Sciences, One Health Research Group, James Cook University, DB41-106, 1 James Cook Dr, Townsville City, QLD, 4811, Australia.
  3. Australian Institute of Marine Sciences, Townsville, QLD, Australia.
  4. Montana State University, Bozeman, MO, USA.
PMID 28091706 2017 Microb Ecol eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Infectious diseases are transmitted when susceptible hosts are exposed to pathogen particles that can replicate within them. Among factors that limit transmission, the environment is particularly important for indirectly transmitted parasites. To try and assess a pathogens' ability to be transmitted through the environment and mitigate risk, we need to quantify its decay where transmission occurs in space such as the microclimate harbouring the pathogen. Hendra virus, a Henipavirus from Australian Pteropid bats, spills-over to horses and humans, causing high mortality. While a vaccine is available, its limited uptake has reduced opportunities for adequate risk management to humans, hence the need to develop synergistic preventive measures, like disrupting its transmission pathways. Transmission likely occurs shortly after virus excretion in paddocks; however, no survival estimates to date have used real environmental conditions. Here, we recorded microclimate conditions and fitted models that predict temperatures and potential evaporation, which we used to simulate virus survival with a temperature-survival model and modification based on evaporation. Predicted survival was lower than previously estimated and likely to be even lower according to potential evaporation. Our results indicate that transmission should occur shortly after the virus is excreted, in a relatively direct way. When potential evaporation is low, and survival is more similar to temperature dependent estimates, transmission might be indirect because the virus can wait several hours until contact is made. We recommend restricting horses' access to trees during night time and reducing grass under trees to reduce virus survival.

Environmental transmission Flying foxes Horses Microclimates Spillover Survival Hendra Virus Microclimate Animals Australia Chiroptera Henipavirus Infections Horses Humans Zoonoses

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

2 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

Microclimate factors such as temperature and evaporation influence Hendra virus survival in paddocks, suggesting short environmental persistence that limits indirect spillover from bats to horses.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Here, we recorded microclimate conditions and fitted models that predict temperatures and potential evaporation, which we used to simulate virus survival with a temperature-survival model and modification based on evaporation. Predicted survival was lower than previously estimated and likely to be even lower according to potential evaporation. Our results indicate that transmission should occur shortly after the virus is excreted, in a relatively direct way.

Method
field microclimate recording; environmental modeling; temperature-survival model simulation
Geographic raw
Australia
Country inferred
Australia
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

The Hendra virus spills over from Australian Pteropid bats to horses and humans, illustrating animal-to-human and animal-to-animal transmission events.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Hendra virus, a Henipavirus from Australian Pteropid bats, spills-over to horses and humans, causing high mortality.

Method
temperature-survival model; environmental modeling
Study design
environmental modeling study
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Australia
Country inferred
Australia