Abstract

Vector-borne diseases are highly sensitive to environment and to environmental changes. Rift Valley Fever (RFV) is a mosquito-borne zootic virus associated with severe diseases in human beings and economic consequences to livestock sector. Animal and human movements have a fundamental impact on RVF transmission. In recent years, there has been a growing interest in the use of mathematics and agent based models to represent and analyze the dynamic of RFV transmission. However, no previous study has taken into consideration animal herds’ mobility and precipitation factors to understand the disease spread. This limitation underlines the necessity to use computational model approach based on multi-agent system in the study of vector-borne diseases transmission and diffusion. In this paper, a multi-agent system combining conceptual model expressiveness is used to study animal herds’ mobility and the precipitation parameter impact on the Rift Valley Fever outbreak in Ferlo Barkedji in Northern Senegal. Simulation scenarios with various parameters, including rain quality, hosts, vectors, camp dispersal around ponds, etc., are unrolled. The different results we have obtained show that the evolution of the number of infected hosts and infected vectors depend on the degree of animal herds’ mobility and on precipitations. Our model provides a framework that permits predicting the spread of the disease associated with the mobility of animal herds.

Highlights

  • Rift Valley Fever (RVF) is an acute fever causing viral “anthropozoonosis” that affects domestic animals such as cattle, buffalo, sheep, goats, camels among others

  • Since 2000, the virus has been located outside the African continent, mainly in Saudi Arabia and Yemen [6] [7] and 2008 in Mayotte [8]

  • In order to understand the epidemiological cycle complexity of vector-borne diseases, several methods were proposed with representation, understanding and often forecasting objectives

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Summary

Introduction

Rift Valley Fever (RVF) is an acute fever causing viral “anthropozoonosis” that affects domestic animals such as cattle, buffalo, sheep, goats, camels among others. The RVF virus (RVFV) is a member of the genus Phlebovirus in the family Bunyaviridae. It is responsible for premature abortion and perinatal mortality in livestock and for hemorrhagic fever and encephalitis in humans. Veterinary offices in Kenya are the first to report the RVF among livestock in the early 1900s. Numerous epidemic/epizootic outbreaks have been reported periodically in many African countries in the past 30 years [1]-[5]. Since 2000, the virus has been located outside the African continent, mainly in Saudi Arabia and Yemen [6] [7] and 2008 in Mayotte [8]

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