Simulation of climate-tick-host-landscape interactions: Effects of shifts in the seasonality of host population fluctuations on tick densities
Authored by Hsiao-Hsuan Wang, W E Grant, P D Teel, S A Hamer
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1111/jvec.12161
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Abstract
Tick vector systems are comprised of complex climate-tick-host-landscape
interactions that are difficult to identify and estimate from empirical
observations alone. We developed a spatially-explicit, individual-based
model, parameterized to represent ecological conditions typical of the
south-central United States, to examine effects of shifts in the
seasonal occurrence of fluctuations of host densities on tick densities.
Simulated shifts in the seasonal occurrence of periods of high and low
host densities affected both the magnitude of unfed tick densities and
the seasonality of tick development. When shifting the seasonal
densities of all size classes of hosts (small, medium, and large)
synchronously, densities of nymphs were affected more by smaller shifts
away from the baseline host seasonality than were densities of larval
and adult life stages. When shifting the seasonal densities of only a
single size-class of hosts while holding other size classes at their
baseline levels, densities of larval, nymph, and adult life stages
responded differently. Shifting seasonal densities of any single
host-class earlier resulted in a greater increase in adult tick density
than when seasonal densities of all host classes were shifted earlier
simultaneously. The mean densities of tick life stages associated with
shifts in host densities resulted from system-level interactions of host
availability with tick phenology. For example, shifting the seasonality
of all hosts ten weeks earlier resulted in an approximately 30\%
increase in the relative degree of temporal co-occurrence of actively
host-seeking ticks and hosts compared to baseline, whereas shifting the
seasonality of all hosts ten weeks later resulted in an approximately
70\% decrease compared to baseline. Differences among scenarios in the
overall presence of active host-seeking ticks in the system were due
primarily to the degree of co-occurrence of periods of high densities of
unfed ticks and periods of high densities of hosts.
Tags
United-states
Computer-simulation
Infectious-diseases
Amblyomma-americanum acari
Lone star tick
Lyme-disease
Contrasting
habitats
Ixodes-scapularis
Boophilus spp.
Home-range