Abstract

Estimation of pathogenic life-history values, for instance the duration a pathogen is retained in an insect vector (i.e., retention period) is of particular importance for understanding plant disease epidemiology. How can we extract values for these epidemiological parameters from conventional small-scale laboratory experiments in which transmission success is measured in relation to durations of vector access to host plants? We provide a solution to this problem by deriving formulae for the empirical curves that these experiments produce, called access period response curves (i.e., transmission success vs access period). We do this by writing simple equations for the fundamental life-cycle components of insect vectors in the laboratory. We then infer values of epidemiological parameters by matching the theoretical and empirical gradients of access period response curves. Using the example of Cassava brown streak virus (CBSV), which has emerged in sub-Saharan Africa and now threatens regional food security, we illustrate the method of matching gradients. We show how applying the method to published data produces a new understanding of CBSV through the inference of retention period, acquisition period and inoculation period parameters. We found that CBSV is retained for a far shorter duration in its insect vector (Bemisia tabaci whitefly) than had previously been assumed. Our results shed light on a number of critical factors that may be responsible for the transition of CBSV from sub- to super-threshold R0 in sub-Saharan Africa. The method is applicable to plant pathogens in general, to supply epidemiological parameter estimates that are crucial for practical management of epidemics and prediction of pandemic risk.

Highlights

  • Estimation of pathogenic life-history values such as retention period for a virus in an insect vector, is of particular importance for understanding and managing plant disease for a range of arthropod-transmitted plant pathogens [1, 2]

  • Cassava brown streak virus (CBSV), which was confined to coastal East Africa and the shores of Lake Malawi, has rapidly expanded its geographic range and threatens regional food security

  • Funder name: UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. https://bbsrc.ukri.org/ The UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council did not play any role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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Summary

Introduction

Estimation of pathogenic life-history values such as retention period for a virus in an insect vector, is of particular importance for understanding and managing plant disease for a range of arthropod-transmitted plant pathogens [1, 2]. Knowledge of parameter values such as retention period are conventionally derived from a set of standard plant pathology experiments, which we refer to here as access period experiments. These experiments yield empirical response curves for success in virus transmission as a function of the duration of time that vectors are given access to individual host plants. We outline a method for extracting estimates for epidemiological parameters such as retention period, and we apply the method to derive estimates for CBSV

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