Literature detail

Hendra Virus Spillover is a Bimodal System Driven by Climatic Factors.

Gerardo Martin1 Carlos Yanez-Arenas2 Raina K Plowright3 Carla Chen4 Billie Roberts5 Lee F Skerratt6
Affiliations 6 institutions
  1. One Health Research Group, College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia. [email protected].
  2. Laboratorio de Conservación de la Biodiversidad, Parque Científico y Tecnológico de Yucatán, Universidad, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico.
  3. Bozeman Disease Ecology Lab, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, USA.
  4. Australian Institute of Marine Sciences, Townsville, QLD, Australia.
  5. Griffith School of Environment, Griffith University, Nathan, QLD, Australia.
  6. One Health Research Group, College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia.
PMID 29349533 2018 Ecohealth eng ppublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Understanding environmental factors driving spatiotemporal patterns of disease can improve risk mitigation strategies. Hendra virus (HeV), discovered in Australia in 1994, spills over from bats (Pteropus sp.) to horses and thence to humans. Below latitude - 22°, almost all spillover events to horses occur during winter, and above this latitude spillover is aseasonal. We generated a statistical model of environmental drivers of HeV spillover per month. The model reproduced the spatiotemporal pattern of spillover risk between 1994 and 2015. The model was generated with an ensemble of methods for presence-absence data (boosted regression trees, random forests and logistic regression). Presences were the locations of horse cases, and absences per spatial unit (2.7 × 2.7 km pixels without spillover) were sampled with the horse census of Queensland and New South Wales. The most influential factors indicate that spillover is associated with both cold-dry and wet conditions. Bimodal responses to several variables suggest spillover involves two systems: one above and one below a latitudinal area close to - 22°. Northern spillovers are associated with cold-dry and wet conditions, and southern with cold-dry conditions. Biologically, these patterns could be driven by immune or behavioural changes in response to food shortage in bats and horse husbandry. Future research should look for differences in these traits between seasons in the two latitudinal regions. Based on the predicted risk patterns by latitude, we recommend enhanced preventive management for horses from March to November below latitude 22° south.

Emerging diseases Flying foxes Hendra virus Horses Spatiotemporal risk Spillover Animals Australia Chiroptera Climate Change Disease Outbreaks Disease Transmission, Infectious Henipavirus Infections Horse Diseases Horses Humans Models, Statistical Spatio-Temporal Analysis

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

4 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Hendra virus spillover risk in Australia is bimodal by latitude, with seasonality and climatic conditions such as cold-dry and wet periods influencing spillover from bats to horses.

Virus
Host
Location
Supporting text

Hendra virus (HeV), discovered in Australia in 1994, spills over from bats (Pteropus sp.) to horses and thence to humans. Below latitude −22°, almost all spillover events to horses occur during winter, and above this latitude spillover is aseasonal. The most influential factors indicate that spillover is associated with both cold-dry and wet conditions.

Method
statistical modeling; boosted regression trees; random forests; logistic regression
Geographic raw
Australia
Country inferred
Australia
Extraction confidence 0.85
Key finding

Differences in bat behaviour and horse husbandry linked to seasonal food shortages may underlie latitudinal variation in Hendra virus spillover.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Northern spillovers are associated with cold-dry and wet conditions, and southern with cold-dry conditions. Biologically, these patterns could be driven by immune or behavioural changes in response to food shortage in bats and horse husbandry.

Method
spatiotemporal analysis; ecological modeling
Geographic raw
Australia (north and south of latitude −22°)
Country inferred
Australia
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Hendra virus transmission occurs as animal-to-animal and animal-to-human spillover, beginning from bats to horses and subsequently to humans in Australia.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Hendra virus (HeV), discovered in Australia in 1994, spills over from bats (Pteropus sp.) to horses and thence to humans.

Method
boosted regression trees; random forests; logistic regression
Study design
statistical modeling of environmental drivers of spillover
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Australia
Country inferred
Australia
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Hendra virus infection spreads from horses to humans following initial spillover from bats in Australia.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

Hendra virus (HeV), discovered in Australia in 1994, spills over from bats (Pteropus sp.) to horses and thence to humans.

Method
boosted regression trees; random forests; logistic regression
Study design
statistical modeling of environmental drivers of spillover
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
Australia
Country inferred
Australia