A spatial agent-based model of the disease vector Ixodes scapularis to explore host-tick associations
                Authored by Samniqueka J Halsey, James R Miller
                
                    Date Published: 2018
                
                
                    DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2018.09.005
                
                
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                    Model Documentation:
                    
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                Abstract
                Tick-borne diseases are increasing worldwide and have a progressively
negative impact on human health. The black-legged tick, Ixodes
scapularis, is the known vector of several emerging tick-borne diseases.
To effectively manage diseases requires enhanced knowledge of the
interactions of the tick, its hosts, and the environment. Modeling
approaches may offer a way to evaluate vector control strategies since
it is impossible to conduct large-scale experiments in natural settings.
Therefore, we created the first spatially explicit individual-based tick
interaction model (SEIB-TIM) that is designed from the perspective of
the tick to examine the processes through which I. scapularis
populations are maintained. Using a two-host wildlife community
consisting of white-footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus) and white-tailed
deer (Odocoileus virginianus), we parameterized our model so that I.
scapularis infestation rates for P. leucopus are within the range of
those reported in field studies. Once our model (SEIB-TIM) accurately
simulated the interactions between I. scapularis, wildlife hosts, and
the environment, we evaluated its robustness to parameter uncertainty
using both global and local sensitivity analyses. Lastly, we related
changes in model parameters to I scapularis life-history traits to
understand how those changes affected the maintenance of I. scapularis
populations. We found that of the model parameters we examined,
increasing mouse grooming by 10\% reduced the total questing nymph
population by 30\% in ten years. In addition, a 10\% reduction in deer
grooming is capable of reducing the questing larvae population by 36\%
and questing nymph population by 35\%. This result indicates that
management interventions aimed at decreasing the number of larval ticks
that can successfully feed on mice in addition to targeting the
reproductive stage of the ticks lifecycle can potentially reduce tick
populations. We therefore conclude that effective management efforts
should be aimed at multiple stages in the ticks life cycle and enacted
for the long term. The maintenance of tick populations can be better
understood and controlling mechanisms identified when incorporating
information on all components of the tick life-cycle into the model.
This SEIB-TIM model serves as the foundation for a more complex model
with additional host species as well as tick-borne pathogens.
                
Tags
                
                    Individual-based model
                
                    Climate-change
                
                    Population-dynamics
                
                    Sensitivity-analysis
                
                    Lyme-disease
                
                    Acari ixodidae
                
                    Infection transmission
                
                    Borne disease
                
                    Black-legged tick
                
                    Ixodes scapularis
                
                    Tick-borne
disease
                
                    Range
expansion
                
                    Community
composition
                
                    Dammini acari