| Literature DB >> 25255815 |
Benjamin P Monroe1, Yoshinori J Nakazawa, Mary G Reynolds, Darin S Carroll.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tanapox virus is a zoonotic infection that causes mild febrile illness and one to several nodular skin lesions. The disease is endemic in parts of Africa. The principal reservoir for the virus that causes Tanapox is unknown, but has been hypothesized to be a non-human primate. This study employs ecological niche modeling (ENM) to determine areas of tropical Africa suitable for the occurrence of human Tanapox and a list of hypothetical reservoirs. The resultant niche model will be a useful tool to guide medical surveillance activities in the region.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25255815 PMCID: PMC4189193 DOI: 10.1186/1476-072X-13-34
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Health Geogr ISSN: 1476-072X Impact factor: 3.918
Figure 1Reported locations of Tanapox cases, 1971–1986. Cases of human Tanapox were identified from World Health Organization smallpox eradication records in the Democratic Republic of Congo and from published reports from Kenya [12].
Figure 2Ecological niche model of Tanapox. Overall predicted distribution of human Tanapox from GARP modeling. Darker areas represent higher model agreement; locations used for modeling are shown as red triangles. Areas highlighted in yellow represent locations visited by international travelers confirmed to have Tanapox (not used in modeling).
Summary of environmental characteristics used in creation of Tanapox ENM
| Layer | Hellinger’s I |
|---|---|
| Maximum temperature | 0.728798459 |
| Precipitation | 0.738374454 |
| Minimum temperature | 0.741624095 |
| Slope | 0.743987125 |
| Land Cover | 0.756236193 |
| Elevation | 0.756455174 |
| Flow Direction | 0.760079558 |
| Temperature Range | 0.767203506 |
| Mean Temperature | 0.770258725 |
| Compound Topographic Index | 0.774950877 |
Hellinger’s I represents niche overlap with values between 1 (niches identical) and 0 (no relationship). Lower values represent more influence on determination of final model.
Summary of primates with ranges including countries where Tanapox has been described
| Genus | Common name | Range | No. of species |
|---|---|---|---|
| Infraorder Lorisiformes | |||
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| Golden Potto | Central Africa | 2 |
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| Potto | West and Central Africa; Kenya | 1 |
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| Bushbabies | Nigeria; Cameroon; Gabon; ROC | 2 |
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| Galagos | Throughout Sub-Saharan africa | 14 |
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| Greater Bushbabies | Kenya; Tanzania; Rwanda; Angola | 3 |
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| Patas Monkey | West Africa to Ethiopia, Kenya, and Tanzania | 1 |
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| Savanah Guenons | Throughout Africa | 6 |
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| Guenons | Throughout Africa | 25 |
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| Talapoin | Cameroon; Gabon; Angola; DRC | 2 |
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| Allen’s Monkey | DRC | 1 |
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| Mangabeys | Central and West Africa; Kenya; Tanzania | 6 |
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| Black Mangabeys | West and Central Africa; Uganda; Burundi; Angola | 3 |
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| Baboons | Throughout Africa | 5 |
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| Mandrill | Nigeria; Cameroon; Equatorial Guinea | 2 |
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| Colobus Monkeys | Throughout Sub-Saharan Africa | 5 |
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| Red Colobus Monkey | West, Central, and East Africa | 9 |
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| Gorilla | Central and West Africa | 2 |
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| Chimpanzees | Central and West Africa; W Tanzania | 2 |
The primate genera with ranges including any part of Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of Congo, Tanzania, Kenya, Sierra Leone [16].
Comparison of selected primate and human Tanapox ENMs
| Family | Genus | Species | Ecological models | ||
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| Niche overlap | Rank | Points modeled | |||
| Lorsidae | |||||
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| 0.648 | 9 | 28 | ||
| Cercopithecidae | |||||
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| 0.670 | 4 | 14 | ||
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| 0.658 | 7 | 13 | ||
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| 0.613 | 11 | 11 | ||
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| 0.493 | 15 | 37 | ||
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| 0.667 | 6 | 15 | ||
| Pongidae | |||||
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The 15 primate species with the highest degree of niche overlap, and the number of points used in creation of the model.
Figure 3Comparison of Tanapox and Primate ENMs. Displayed are the overlap of ENM’s for Tanapox and three hypothesized primate reservoirs (C. petaurista, C. nicitans, C. campbelli). Areas of niche overlap are displayed in gray. The current species distribution for each primate was retrieved from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN, http://www.iucn.org/) and is shown in the crosshatched area.