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Aquatic invasive species and emerging infectious disease threats: A One Health perspective

机译:水生入侵物种和新兴传染病威胁:一个健康的视角

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An estimated 60–75% of the world’s infectious diseases of humans are zoonotic, infecting both humans and other animals. Many are vector-borne, relying on transmission by mosquitoes and biting flies that are aquatic for much of their lifespan. Others rely on aquatic molluscs, fishes, or other aquatic animals for completion of their transmission cycles, and others develop and thrive in diverse freshwater environments outside any host. While such diseases remain firmly endemic in many areas, new outbreaks of infectious diseases associated with freshwater have occurred throughout the world, and many others have spread to new locations. This may involve introduction of aquatic vectors into locations where the disease was previously unknown, as in the recent occurrences of mosquito-transmitted diseases such as West Nile Virus in North America, dengue fever in southern Europe, Chikungunya virus in the Caribbean and South America, and dirofilariasis in Central and Eastern Europe. Such a pattern is also possible with such major human pathogens as Schistosoma blood flukes and food-borne trematodes, through introduction of aquatic host snails from long-established foci in other areas. Alternatively, waterborne pathogens may be introduced directly, leading to disease outbreaks such as the cholera disaster still unfolding in Haiti. Accidental or intentional introduction of pathogens or their aquatic vectors and hosts are among the primary concerns that affect international trade, travel, and global health security. These concerns are compounded by the prospect of warming climate, potentially resulting in primarily tropical diseases encroaching into historically subtropical or temperate regions. Thus, we must be prepared for the possibility of geographic spread of diseases into areas where they have not occurred, or reintroduction into areas where they once occurred but have been eliminated through control measures. For example, North America and Europe are at risk for reintroduction of such major “tropical” diseases as malaria and yellow fever, and thus must come under increasing scrutiny, starting with surveillance of freshwater systems for both established and potentially invasive vector and host populations. This critical perspective paper briefly reviews selected previous cases in which aquatic invasive species have contributed to infectious disease emergence, re-emergence, or increase, and proposes One Health strategies for integrating human, animal, and environmental monitoring and surveillance to better prepare for or prevent geographic spread of major human health threats associated with aquatic systems.
机译:据估计,全世界60-75%的人类传染病是人畜共患病,既感染人类又感染其他动物。许多是媒介传播的,依靠蚊子和叮咬的蝇传播,这些蝇在其大部分寿命中都是水生的。其他人则依靠水生软体动物,鱼类或其他水生动物来完成其传播周期,其他人则在任何寄主以外的各种淡水环境中生长并繁衍。尽管此类疾病在许多地区仍然是地方性流行病,但与淡水有关的新的传染病暴发已在世界范围内爆发,许多其他疾病已蔓延到新的地点。这可能涉及将水生媒介物引入该疾病以前未知的地方,例如最近发生的蚊子传播疾病,例如北美的西尼罗河病毒,南欧的登革热,加勒比海和南美的基孔肯雅病毒,和中欧和东欧的铁丝虫病。通过引入来自其他地区历史悠久的疫源地的水生寄主蜗牛,这种模式对于血吸虫血吸虫和食源性吸虫等主要人类病原体也是可能的。或者,可以直接引入水生病原体,导致疾病爆发,例如在海地仍在蔓延的霍乱灾难。偶然或故意引入病原体或其水生媒介和宿主是影响国际贸易,旅行和全球健康安全的主要问题。气候变暖的前景加剧了这些担忧,有可能导致主要是热带疾病入侵到历史上亚热带或温带地区。因此,我们必须为疾病在地理上扩散到尚未发生的地区或重新引入曾经发生但已通过控制措施消除的地区做好准备。例如,北美和欧洲面临重新引入诸如疟疾和黄热病等主要“热带”疾病的风险,因此必须受到越来越严格的审查,从对既有和潜在侵入性媒介和宿主种群的淡水系统进行监测开始。这篇重要的观点论文简要回顾了以前选定的案例,在这些案例中,水生入侵物种促成传染病的出现,重新出现或增加,并提出了整合人类,动物和环境监测与监视以更好地准备或预防的一种健康策略。与水生系统有关的主要人类健康威胁的地理分布。

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