| Literature DB >> 33143201 |
Andrei Tronin1, Nikolay Tokarevich2, Olga Blinova2, Bogdan Gnativ3, Roman Buzinov4,5, Olga Sokolova4,5, Birgitta Evengard6, Tatyana Pahomova7, Liliya Bubnova7, Olga Safonova7.
Abstract
In recent decades, a considerable increase in the number of tick-bitten humans has been recorded in the north of European Russia. At the same time, significant climatic changes, such as an increase in air temperature, were noticed in this region. The northern border of the ixodidae distribution area lies in the north of European Russia, therefore the analysis of the population dynamics is of particular interest regarding the possible impact of the climate changes. Unfortunately, in such a large territory field, studies on tick abundance are very difficult. In our study, the official statistics for the number of tick-bitten humans were used. This kind of statistical analysis has been conducted in the Russian Federation for many years, and can be used for the estimation of climate change impact on tick abundance. Statistical data on tick-bitten humans have been collected in three large regions for several decades. For the same regions, the average annual air temperature was calculated and modeled. An S-shaped distribution of the number of victims depending on the average annual air temperature was established, which can be described as "Verhulst's law", or logistic function. However, the development of the population does not depend on time, but on the temperature of the ambient air.Entities:
Keywords: annual air temperature; climatic changes; tick-bitten humans
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33143201 PMCID: PMC7663206 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17218006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Geographical location of the Arkhangelsk region, the Republic of Karelia and the Komi Republic in the north of European Russia.
Figure 2TBIR in the Arkhangelsk Oblast, the Republics of Komi and Karelia in 1980–2016.
Figure 3Tick-bite incidence rate (ordinate) versus average annual model air temperature (abscissa) for all administrative units of the Arkhangelsk Oblast, Karelia and Komi. TBIR on a logarithmic scale. Separate sample groups are highlighted in the figure. The description is given in the text.
Figure 4Nonzero tick-bite incidence rate versus average annual model air temperature for all administrative units of the Arkhangelsk Oblast, Karelia and Komi. The highlighted areas are represented as the invasion zone (blue color), the exponential growth zone (red) and the saturation zone (green).
Figure 5Tick-bite incidence rate versus average annual model air temperature for all administrative units of the Arkhangelsk Oblast, Karelia and Komi, and the “Verhulst equation” (shown in red).
Figure 6Regional distribution of tick-bite incidence rate versus average annual model air temperature for all administrative units of the Arkhangelsk Oblast, Karelia and Komi.