Literature detail

Conditions affecting the timing and magnitude of Hendra virus shedding across pteropodid bat populations in Australia.

D J Páez1 J Giles2 H McCallum2 H Field3 D Jordan4 A J Peel2 R K Plowright1
Affiliations 4 institutions
  1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology,Montana State University,Bozeman,USA.
  2. Griffith School of Environment,Griffith University,Queensland,Australia.
  3. EcoHealth Alliance,460 West 34th Street - 17th Floor,New York,NY 10001,USA.
  4. New South Wales Department of Primary Industries,New South Wales,Australia.
PMID 28942750 2017 Epidemiol Infect eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

Understanding infection dynamics in animal hosts is fundamental to managing spillover and emergence of zoonotic infections. Hendra virus is endemic in Australian pteropodid bat populations and can be lethal to horses and humans. However, we know little about the factors driving Hendra virus prevalence in resevoir bat populations, making spillover difficult to predict. We use Hendra virus prevalence data collected from 13 000 pooled bat urine samples across space and time to determine if pulses of prevalence are periodic and synchronized across sites. We also test whether site-specific precipitation and temperature affect the amplitude of the largest annual prevalence pulses. We found little evidence for a periodic signal in Hendra virus prevalence. Although the largest amplitude pulses tended to occur over winter, pulses could also occur in other seasons. We found that Hendra virus prevalence was weakly synchronized across sites over short distances, suggesting that prevalence is driven by local-scale effects. Finally, we found that drier conditions in previous seasons and the abundance of Pteropus alecto were positively correlated with the peak annual values of Hendra virus prevalence. Our results suggest that in addition to seasonal effects, bat density and local climatic conditions interact to drive Hendra virus infection dynamics.

Animal pathogens Ebola virus emerging infections epidemiology infectious disease epidemiology Hendra Virus Animals Australia Chiroptera Climate Disease Reservoirs Henipavirus Infections Prevalence Seasons Spatio-Temporal Analysis Time Factors Virus Shedding

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

2 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Hendra virus prevalence in Australian pteropodid bats was associated with drier previous seasons and higher abundance of Pteropus alecto, indicating local climatic and population density effects on reservoir infection dynamics.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Hendra virus is endemic in Australian pteropodid bat populations... We found that drier conditions in previous seasons and the abundance of Pteropus alecto were positively correlated with the peak annual values of Hendra virus prevalence.

Method
spatio-temporal analysis; prevalence monitoring
Sample type
bat urine samples
Geographic raw
Australia
Country inferred
Australia
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Surveillance of Australian pteropodid bats using pooled urine samples quantified spatial and temporal patterns in Hendra virus prevalence.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

We use Hendra virus prevalence data collected from 13 000 pooled bat urine samples across space and time to determine if pulses of prevalence are periodic and synchronized across sites.

Sample type
urine
Geographic raw
Australia
Country inferred
Australia