Abstract

Patterns of vector-borne disease risk are changing globally in space and time and elevated disease risk of vector-borne infection can be driven by anthropogenic modification of the environment. Incidence of Lyme disease, caused by the bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto, has risen in a number of locations in North America and this increase may be driven by spatially or numerically expanding populations of the primary tick vector, Ixodes scapularis. We used a model selection approach to identify habitat fragmentation and land-use/land cover variables to test the hypothesis that the amount and configuration of forest cover at spatial scales relevant to deer, the primary hosts of adult ticks, would be the predominant determinants of tick abundance. We expected that land cover heterogeneity and amount of forest edge, a habitat thought to facilitate deer foraging and survival, would be the strongest driver of tick density and that larger spatial scales (5–10 km) would be more important than smaller scales (1 km). We generated metrics of deciduous and mixed forest fragmentation using Fragstats 4.4 implemented in ArcMap 10.3 and found, after adjusting for multicollinearity, that total forest edge within a 5 km buffer had a significant negative effect on tick density and that the proportion of forested land cover within a 10 km buffer was positively associated with density of I. scapularis nymphs. None of the 1 km fragmentation metrics were found to significantly improve the fit of the model. Elevation, previously associated with increased density of I. scapularis nymphs in Virginia, while significantly predictive in univariate analysis, was not an important driver of nymph density relative to fragmentation metrics. Our results suggest that amount of forest cover (i.e., lack of fragmentation) is the most important driver of I. scapularis density in our study system.

Highlights

  • The risk associated with vector borne zoonoses is changing globally in space and time due to natural and anthropogenic modifications to the environment [1,2,3]

  • We found different sets of predictor variables for each tick species and for I. scapularis infection prevalence with B. burgdorferi, we did not find strong support for our hypothesis that I. scapularis infection prevalence would be driven by local conditions while I. scapularis abundance would be driven by larger-scale landscape variation

  • That the relative abundance of I. scapularis is generally consistent from year to year (Brinkerhoff and Ferrell unpublished data, Figure S1) suggests that there are site-level factors that determine habitat suitability and/or population persistence for this species and our analyses suggest that there are larger-scale aspects of landscape context that are important predictors of I. scapularis density, and potentially B. burgdorferi infection prevalence

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Summary

Introduction

The risk associated with vector borne zoonoses is changing globally in space and time due to natural and anthropogenic modifications to the environment [1,2,3]. Vegetation, landscape composition, and land-use patterns can affect local climatic conditions and affect vector habitat suitability [15,16,17] and landscape and land-use affect host abundance in ways that can impact vector–host interactions and pathogen transmission dynamics [10,18,19,20]. Public Health 2018, 15, 737; doi:10.3390/ijerph15040737 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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