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Climate change and Ixodes tick-borne diseases of humans

机译:人类的气候变化和tick虫传播的疾病

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摘要

The evidence that climate warming is changing the distribution of Ixodes ticks and the pathogens they transmit is reviewed and evaluated. The primary approaches are either phenomenological, which typically assume that climate alone limits current and future distributions, or mechanistic, asking which tick-demographic parameters are affected by specific abiotic conditions. Both approaches have promise but are severely limited when applied separately. For instance, phenomenological approaches (e.g. climate envelope models) often select abiotic variables arbitrarily and produce results that can be hard to interpret biologically. On the other hand, although laboratory studies demonstrate strict temperature and humidity thresholds for tick survival, these limits rarely apply to field situations. Similarly, no studies address the influence of abiotic conditions on more than a few life stages, transitions or demographic processes, preventing comprehensive assessments. Nevertheless, despite their divergent approaches, both mechanistic and phenomenological models suggest dramatic range expansions of Ixodes ticks and tick-borne disease as the climate warms. The predicted distributions, however, vary strongly with the models' assumptions, which are rarely tested against reasonable alternatives. These inconsistencies, limited data about key tick-demographic and climatic processes and only limited incorporation of non-climatic processes have weakened the application of this rich area of research to public health policy or actions. We urge further investigation of the influence of climate on vertebrate hosts and tick-borne pathogen dynamics. In addition, testing model assumptions and mechanisms in a range of natural contexts and comparing their relative importance as competing models in a rigorous statistical framework will significantly advance our understanding of how climate change will alter the distribution, dynamics and risk of tick-borne disease.
机译:审查和评估了气候变暖正在改变I虱及其传播的病原体的证据。主要方法是现象学(通常假设仅气候条件会限制当前和将来的分布),或者是机械学的方法,即询问哪些滴答人口参数受特定的非生物条件影响。两种方法都有希望,但单独应用时会受到严重限制。例如,现象学方法(例如气候包络模型)通常会任意选择非生物变量,并产生难以用生物学解释的结果。另一方面,尽管实验室研究表明tick生存的温度和湿度阈值严格,但这些限制很少适用于现场情况。同样,没有研究解决非生物环境对多个生命阶段,过渡或人口统计学过程的影响,从而无法进行全面评估。尽管如此,尽管采用了不同的方法,但力学模型和现象学模型都表明随着气候变暖,x虱和tick传播疾病的范围会急剧扩大。但是,预测分布随模型假设的不同而有很大差异,很少会针对合理的替代方案进行测试。这些不一致之处,关于关键的人口统计和气候过程的数据有限,以及仅将非气候过程纳入其中的情况有限,削弱了这一研究领域在公共卫生政策或行动中的应用。我们敦促进一步研究气候对脊椎动物寄主和tick传病原体动力学的影响。此外,在一系列自然环境中测试模型假设和机制,并在严格的统计框架中比较它们作为竞争模型的相对重要性,将极大地增进我们对气候变化将如何改变tick传播疾病的分布,动态和风险的理解。

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