Abstract

The unexpected Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa in 2014 involving the Zaire ebolavirus made clear that other regions outside Central Africa, its previously documented niche, were at risk of future epidemics. The complex transmission cycle and a lack of epidemiological data make mapping areas at risk of the disease challenging. We used a Geographic Information System-based multicriteria evaluation (GIS-MCE), a knowledge-based approach, to identify areas suitable for Ebola virus spillover to humans in regions of Guinea, Congo and Gabon where Ebola viruses already emerged. We identified environmental, climatic and anthropogenic risk factors and potential hosts from a literature review. Geographical data layers, representing risk factors, were combined to produce suitability maps of Ebola virus spillover at the landscape scale. Our maps show high spatial and temporal variability in the suitability for Ebola virus spillover at a fine regional scale. Reported spillover events fell in areas of intermediate to high suitability in our maps, and a sensitivity analysis showed that the maps produced were robust. There are still important gaps in our knowledge about what factors are associated with the risk of Ebola virus spillover. As more information becomes available, maps produced using the GIS-MCE approach can be easily updated to improve surveillance and the prevention of future outbreaks.

Highlights

  • Ebola virus disease is an emerging zoonotic disease caused by a filovirus with a mortality rate in humans that can reach 90% [1]

  • Four different suitability maps for EBOV spillover were produced, one for each category of risk factors

  • Details on the creation of these maps are provided in S3 Text. It remains unclear which factors are relevant for the maintenance of the virus in bat populations [11,49], we considered the same risk factors as for the spillover maps, but left out of the model the factors related to the transmission to humans

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Summary

Introduction

Ebola virus disease is an emerging zoonotic disease caused by a filovirus with a mortality rate in humans that can reach 90% [1]. There are six species of Ebolavirus: Zaire ebolavirus, Sudan ebolavirus, Bundibugyo ebolavirus, Taï ebolavirus, Reston ebolavirus and Bombali ebolavirus. The first four can infect humans, only one case of infection by Taï ebolavirus has been reported [2]. Zaire ebolavirus (EBOV) is apparently the most pathogenic for humans and has been responsible for the majority of outbreaks [1]. The first outbreak of Ebola virus disease took place in 1976 in what is the Democratic Republic of Congo ( Zaire). A new outbreak was reported in Guinea in January 2021 [4]

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