Abstract

Vibrio parahaemolyticus is a leading cause of seafood-borne gastroenteritis. Given its natural presence in brackish waters, there is a need to develop operational forecast models that can sufficiently predict the bacterium's spatial and temporal variation. This work attempted to develop V. parahaemolyticus prediction models using frequently measured time-indexed and -lagged water quality measures. Models were built using a large data set (n = 1,043) of surface water samples from 2007 to 2010 previously analyzed for V. parahaemolyticus in the Chesapeake Bay. Water quality variables were classified as time indexed, 1-month lag, and 2-month lag. Tobit regression models were used to account for V. parahaemolyticus measures below the limit of quantification and to simultaneously estimate the presence and abundance of the bacterium. Models were evaluated using cross-validation and metrics that quantify prediction bias and uncertainty. Presence classification models containing only one type of water quality parameter (e.g., temperature) performed poorly, while models with additional water quality parameters (i.e., salinity, clarity, and dissolved oxygen) performed well. Lagged variable models performed similarly to time-indexed models, and lagged variables occasionally contained a predictive power that was independent of or superior to that of time-indexed variables. Abundance estimation models were less effective, primarily due to a restricted number of samples with abundances above the limit of quantification. These findings indicate that an operational in situ prediction model is attainable but will require a variety of water quality measurements and that lagged measurements will be particularly useful for forecasting. Future work will expand variable selection for prediction models and extend the spatial-temporal extent of predictions by using geostatistical interpolation techniques.IMPORTANCEVibrio parahaemolyticus is one of the leading causes of seafood-borne illness in the United States and across the globe. Exposure often occurs from the consumption of raw shellfish. Despite public health concerns, there have been only sporadic efforts to develop environmental prediction and forecast models for the bacterium preharvest. This analysis used commonly sampled water quality measurements of temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen, and clarity to develop models for V. parahaemolyticus in surface water. Predictors also included measurements taken months before water was tested for the bacterium. Results revealed that the use of multiple water quality measurements is necessary for satisfactory prediction performance, challenging current efforts to manage the risk of infection based upon water temperature alone. The results also highlight the potential advantage of including historical water quality measurements. This analysis shows promise and lays the groundwork for future operational prediction and forecast models.

Highlights

  • Vibrio parahaemolyticus is a leading cause of seafood-borne gastroenteritis

  • While this work is essential to reduce the risk of vibriosis, the United States Food and Drug Administration’s (USFDA) quantitative microbial risk assessment of V. parahaemolyticus in raw oysters identified in sensitivity analyses that abundance at the time of harvest is the largest source of variation in the risk of vibriosis [12]

  • Additional water quality data retrieved from the Chesapeake Bay Program Data Hub varied considerably in spatialtemporal frequency at the 148 monitoring stations originally used for V. parahaemolyticus data collection (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Vibrio parahaemolyticus is a leading cause of seafood-borne gastroenteritis. Given its natural presence in brackish waters, there is a need to develop operational forecast models that can sufficiently predict the bacterium’s spatial and temporal variation. There have been only sporadic efforts to develop environmental prediction and forecast models for the bacterium preharvest This analysis used commonly sampled water quality measurements of temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen, and clarity to develop models for V. parahaemolyticus in surface water. Environmental samples taken across decades have shown the abundance of these bacteria to be strongly correlated with warming waters and as such have been labeled a “microbial barometer of climate change” [3, 4] This trend is considered to be a major driver of the marked increase in vibriosis illnesses observed across the United States, including the Chesapeake Bay, in the last 2 decades, and recent reporting indicates that illness rates continue to rise [5,6,7,8]. These models will, ideally, be based on frequently measured parameters so that they can operate within existing monitoring frameworks and avoid financial or logistical hurdles

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