Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, the virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), has expanded rapidly throughout the world. Thus, it is important to understand how global factors linked with the functioning of the Anthropocene are responsible for the COVID-19 outbreak. We tested hypotheses that the number of COVID-19 cases, number of deaths and growth rate of recorded infections: (1) are positively associated with population density as well as (2) proportion of the human population living in urban areas as a proxies of interpersonal contact rate, (3) age of the population in a given country as an indication of that population's susceptibility to COVID-19; (4) net migration rate and (5) number of tourists as proxies of infection pressure, and negatively associated with (5) gross domestic product which is a proxy of health care quality. Data at the country level were compiled from publicly available databases and analysed with gradient boosting regression trees after controlling for confounding factors (e.g. geographic location). We found a positive association between the number of COVID-19 cases in a given country and gross domestic product, number of tourists, and geographic longitude. The number of deaths was positively associated with gross domestic product, number of tourists in a country, and geographic longitude. The effects of gross domestic product and number of tourists were non-linear, with clear thresholds above which the number of COVID-19 cases and deaths increased rapidly. The growth rate of COVID-19 cases was positively linked to the number of tourists and gross domestic product. The growth rate of COVID-19 cases was negatively associated with the mean age of the population and geographic longitude. Growth was slower in less urbanised countries. This study demonstrates that the characteristics of the human population and high mobility, but not population density, may help explain the global spread of the virus. In addition, geography, possibly via climate, may play a role in the pandemic. The unexpected positive and strong association between gross domestic product and number of cases, deaths, and growth rate suggests that COVID-19 may be a new civilisation disease affecting rich economies.

Highlights

  • Macroecology is the study of broad-scale ecological patterns and processes [1]

  • We found that there is a positive association between the number of tourists visiting a given country and the number of infections, deaths, and growth rate of COVID-19 cases, which is in agreement with our expectations

  • The COVID-19 pandemic prompted the need to identify the important components in the disease spread for better projections of global-scale pandemics

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Summary

Introduction

Macroecology is the study of broad-scale ecological patterns and processes [1]. Study the influence of the environment on humans, including the effects of biotic, abiotic, and social conditions on the population growth, economy, and health of our own species [2,3]. One of the most important areas of macroecology in the human context is disease ecology [6,7]. As hosts, exhibit three specific macroecological patterns: (1) humans spreading geographically disperse pathogens and parasites, (2) humans visiting or settling in new areas encounter new organisms, including new pathogens, and new alternative hosts for existing pathogens and parasites; (3) increased human population density and frequency of contact substantially influence the ecology of disease [2]. Understanding how the spread of diseases is related to environmental and socioeconomic factors requires a global perspective [8]

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