| Literature DB >> 29312966 |
Marius Gilbert1,2, Diann J Prosser3, Geli Zhang4, Jean Artois1, Madhur S Dhingra1, Michael Tildesley5, Scott H Newman6, Fusheng Guo7, Peter Black7, Filip Claes7, Wantanee Kalpradvidh7, YeunKyung Shin7, Wooseog Jeong8, John Y Takekawa9,10, Hansoo Lee11, Xiangming Xiao4,12.
Abstract
In the last few years, several reassortant subtypes of highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses (HPAI H5Nx) have emerged in East Asia. These new viruses, mostly of subtype H5N1, H5N2, H5N6, and H5N8 belonging to clade 2.3.4.4, have been found in several Asian countries and have caused outbreaks in poultry in China, South Korea, and Vietnam. HPAI H5Nx also have spread over considerable distances with the introduction of viruses belonging to the same 2.3.4.4 clade in the U.S. (2014-2015) and in Europe (2014-2015 and 2016-2017). In this paper, we examine the emergence and spread of these new viruses in Asia in relation to published datasets on HPAI H5Nx distribution, movement of migratory waterfowl, avian influenza risk models, and land-use change analyses. More specifically, we show that between 2000 and 2015, vast areas of northeast China have been newly planted with rice paddy fields (3.21 million ha in Heilongjiang, Jilin, and Liaoning) in areas connected to other parts of Asia through migratory pathways of wild waterfowl. We hypothesize that recent land use changes in northeast China have affected the spatial distribution of wild waterfowl, their stopover areas, and the wild-domestic interface, thereby altering transmission dynamics of avian influenza viruses across flyways. Detailed studies of the habitat use by wild migratory birds, of the extent of the wild-domestic interface, and of the circulation of avian influenza viruses in those new planted areas may help to shed more light on this hypothesis, and on the possible impact of those changes on the long-distance patterns of avian influenza transmission.Entities:
Keywords: agriculture and public health; avian influenza; disease ecology; land use change; spatial epidemiology
Year: 2017 PMID: 29312966 PMCID: PMC5742135 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2017.00225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1(A) Number of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5Nx domestic outbreaks in China, North Korea, South Korea, and Japan over time (A) compared to all other Asian countries (B), colored by subtype: H5N1 (red), H5N2 (green), H5N8 (blue), and H5N6 (orange). (B,C) Distribution of HPAI H5Nx domestic outbreaks in Asia in 2004–2011 (C) and 2012–2017 (D) with the same color code (extraction from the Empres-I database from first Jan 2004 to 13th June 2017, all H5Nx HPAI outbreaks).
Figure 2Tracks of wild Anatidae in and around China, colored by month (524 birds, 19 species, from 2006 to 2017, USGS/FAO/KoEco/APQA/NIER surveys). Anas penelope (n = 33), Anas acuta (n = 50), Anser indicus (n = 98), Anas strepera (n = 17), Tadorna ferruginea (n = 51), Anas crecca (n = 20), Anas querquedula (n = 16), Anas clypeata (n = 19), Anser anser (n = 2), Anas platyrhynchos (n = 98), Anas poecilorhyncha (n = 29), Anas formosa (n = 2), Anas falcata (n = 5), Netta rufina (n = 1), Anser cygnoides (n = 46), Cygnus cygnus (n = 11), Cygnus columbianus (n = 2), Anser albifrons (n = 22), Anser fabalis (n = 2). The data presented here were collected according to handling and marking procedures approved by the USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center Animal Care and Use Committee and the Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency ethical committee. The different datasets are described in the Movebank database (https://www.movebank.org).
Figure 3Distribution of suitability for infection by HPAI H5Nx viruses from Dhingra et al. (20) spatial model (A) and spatial overlay with all Anatidae migration tracks (B).
Figure 4Distribution of rice harvest in 2015 (left) and % difference between the surface harvested in 2015 and 2000 at 5 km × 5 km grid cells, according to Zhang et al. (21).
Figure 5Temporal distribution of rice harvested areas in different Chinese provinces over time, according to Zhang et al. (21).
Figure 6Risk of domestic-to-wild avian influenza transmission during the breeding (left) and wintering (right) season according to Prosser et al. (32).