Ecological niche and positive clusters of two West Nile virus vectors in Ontario, Canada

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1007/s10393-023-01653-8

Language of the publication
English
Date
2023-11-20
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Talbot, Benoit
  • Kulkarni, Manisha A.
  • Rioux-Rousseau, Maxime
  • Siebels, Kevin
  • Kotchi, Serge Olivier
  • Ogden, Nicholas H.
  • Ludwig, Antoinette
Publisher
EcoHealth Alliance

Abstract

West Nile virus (WNV) is a mosquito-borne pathogen associated with uncommon but severe neurological complications in humans, especially among the elderly and immune-compromised. In Northeastern North America, the Culex pipiens/restuans complex and Aedes vexans are the two principal vector mosquito species/species groups of WNV. Using a 10-year surveillance dataset of WNV vector captures at 118 sites across an area of 40,000 km2 in Eastern Ontario, Canada, the ecological niches of Cx. pipiens/restuans and Aedes vexans were modeled by random forest analysis. Spatiotemporal clusters of WNV-positive mosquito pools were identified using Kulldorf’s spatial scan statistic. The study region encompasses land cover types and climate representative of highly populated Southeastern Canada. We found highest vector habitat suitability in the eastern half of the study area, where temperatures are generally warmer (variable importance > 0.40) and residential and agricultural cropland cover is more prominent (variable importance > 0.25). We found spatiotemporal clusters of high WNV infection rates around the city of Ottawa in both mosquito vector species. These results support the previous literature in the same region and elsewhere suggesting areas surrounding highly populated areas are also high-risk areas for vector-borne zoonoses such as the WNV.

Subject

  • Health

Keywords

  • Culex pipiens/restuans,
  • Aedes vexans,
  • West Nile virus,
  • Kulldorf’s spatial scan statistic,
  • Machine learning,
  • Random forest algorithm

Rights

Pagination

249-262

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

PubMed ID
37985537
ISSN
1612-9210

Article

Journal title
EcoHealth
Journal volume
20

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URI

Collection(s)

Communicable diseases

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