| Literature DB >> 34876036 |
Malay Pramanik1, Poonam Singh1, Ramesh C Dhiman2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Kyasanur forest disease (KFD), known as monkey fever, was for the first time reported in 1957 from the Shivamogga district of Karnataka. But since 2011, it has been spreading to the neighbouring state of Kerala, Goa, Maharashtra, and Tamil Nadu. The disease is transmitted to humans, monkeys and by the infected bite of ticks Haemaphysalis spinigera. It is known that deforestation and ecological changes are the main reasons for KFD emergence, but the bio-climatic understanding and emerging pathways remain unknown.Entities:
Keywords: Bio-climatic envelope model; Haemaphysalis spinigera tick; Hemorrhagic fever; Kyasanur forest disease; Monkey disease; Tick-borne disease
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34876036 PMCID: PMC8650402 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-021-06908-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Locations of reported distribution of Haemaphysalis spinigera tick, KFD endemic areas till 2011 and afterwards
Fig. 2Methodological flow diagram showing the link between suitable climatic conditions and disease transmission of Kyasanur forest disease
Fig. 3The ROC curve for Haemaphysalis spinigera tick showing different AUC values
Selected set of bio-climatic variables after PCA results and their contribution to the KFD suitability
| Id of bioclimatic variable | Selected bio-climatic variable | Contribution (%) | Optimum bio-climatic conditions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bio1 | Annual mean temperature | 0.1 | 23–26.2 °C |
| Bio2 | Mean diurnal temperature range | 21 | 8–10 °C |
| Bio8 | Mean temperature of wettest quarter | 2.4 | 22.5–25 °C |
| Bio9 | Mean temperature of driest quarter | 0.5 | 20–28 °C |
| Bio10 | Mean temperature of warmest quarter | 32.5 | 25.4–30 °C |
| Bio11 | Mean temperature of coldest quarter | 3.9 | 16.5°–24 C |
| Bio12 | Annual precipitation | 11.1 | > 1400 mm |
| Bio13 | Precipitation of wettest period | 17.6 | 500–650 mm |
Fig. 4The Jackknife test results indicating the relative importance of bio-climatic variables
Fig. 5Relationship between selected climatic variables and probability of the presence of Haemaphysalis spinigera ticks. a Annual mean temperature (bio1, °C), b mean diurnal temperature range (bio2, °C), c mean temperature of wettest quarter (bio8, °C), d mean temperature of driest quarter (bio9, mm), e mean temperature of warmest quarter (bio10, mm), f mean temperature of coldest quarter (bio11, CV), g annual precipitation (bio12, mm), h precipitation of wettest period (bio13, mm), i precipitation of driest month (bio14, mm), j precipitation seasonality (bio15, CV), k precipitation of wettest quarter (bio16, mm), l precipitation of driest quarter (bio17, mm), m precipitation of warmest quarter (bio18, mm), n precipitation of coldest quarter (bio19, mm). Red curves indicate the average response and blue margins signify ± SD estimated over 50 replicates
Fig. 6Map of the predicted potential distribution of Haemaphysalis spinigera tick
Area under different risk classes for KFD tick
| Risk categories | Area (sq. km) | Area in % |
|---|---|---|
| Very low risk | 359,767 | 53 |
| Low risk | 220,650 | 33 |
| Medium risk | 45,769 | 7 |
| High risk | 18,258 | 3 |
| Very high risk | 26,429 | 4 |
| Total | 670,873 | 100 |
State-wise high risk area for KFD tick
| States | High suitable area (km2) | % of very highly suitable area in the total suitability | % of very highly suitable area in the state |
|---|---|---|---|
| Goa | 2056 | 5.18 | 55.66 |
| Karnataka | 23,265 | 58.66 | 12.16 |
| Kerala | 4765 | 12.02 | 12.64 |
| Maharashtra | 7198 | 18.15 | 2.34 |
| Tamil Nadu | 2376 | 5.99 | 1.82 |
| Total area | 39,660 | 100 |
Fig. 7Predicted potential distribution of Haemaphysalis spinigera tick in endemic region of Shivamogga district