Modelling the effect of landscape heterogeneity on the efficacy of vaccination for wildlife infectious disease control
Authored by Erin E Rees, Bruce A Pond, Rowland R Tinline, Denise Belanger
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.12101
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Model Documentation:
ODD
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Abstract
1. Zoonotic disease control presents significant costs and challenges in
human and wildlife populations. Although spatial variability and
temporal variability in host populations play a significant role
influencing the spread and persistence of pathogens, their impact on the
effectiveness of disease control are not well understood. 2. Field
studies are impractical for many zoonotic diseases; thus, simulation
modelling is an alternative. Some research has experimented with
metapopulation models of host-pathogen systems, with discrete host
populations distributed on a network of connections or on a
one-dimensional transect of contiguous cells. Little attention has been
paid to treating geographic space as a fine-grained two-dimensional
continuum, a more appropriate spatial model for many generalist host and
vector species. 3. Using raccoon rabies as an example, we apply an
individual-based spatially explicit stochastic simulation model to
evaluate effectiveness of vaccination barrier strategies to control
rabies. Barrier width and immunization levels are varied over landscapes
with habitats of varying quality and spatial heterogeneity, resulting in
varying degrees of host connectivity. 4. Our results demonstrate that
spatial heterogeneity in the landscape does affect vaccination efficacy.
The probability that rabies will breach a vaccination barrier is greater
and rabies incidence is higher in landscapes with (i) overall
good-quality homogeneous habitat and (ii) overall poor-quality habitat
with high spatial heterogeneity, than in landscapes with overall
good-quality habitat and high spatial heterogeneity. The influence of
landscape conditions on disease dynamics decreases with increasing
population immunity. 5. Synthesis and applications. Using a spatially
explicit stochastic simulation model, we demonstrated that landscape
spatial heterogeneity and vaccination control will interact to influence
the success of controlling infectious disease outbreaks. Further, under
some landscape conditions, insufficient vaccination is
counter-productive because immunized individuals (i) reduce the number
of disease transmitting contacts, preventing the disease from growing
rapidly thus depleting the susceptible population; and (ii) survive to
replenish the stock of susceptible animals through reproduction, facilitating disease persistence.
Tags
Dynamics
population
United-states
Simulation-model
Spread
Canada
Raccoon rabies
Oral rabies vaccination
Epidemic
models
Ontario