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Ecological niche and geographic distribution of human monkeypox in Africa
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 2, Iss 1, p e176 (2007)
- Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- Monkeypox virus, a zoonotic member of the genus Orthopoxviridae, can cause a severe, smallpox-like illness in humans. Monkeypox virus is thought to be endemic to forested areas of western and Central Africa. Considerably more is known about human monkeypox disease occurrence than about natural sylvatic cycles of this virus in non-human animal hosts. We use human monkeypox case data from Africa for 1970-2003 in an ecological niche modeling framework to construct predictive models of the ecological requirements and geographic distribution of monkeypox virus across West and Central Africa. Tests of internal predictive ability using different subsets of input data show the model to be highly robust and suggest that the distinct phylogenetic lineages of monkeypox in West Africa and Central Africa occupy similar ecological niches. High mean annual precipitation and low elevations were shown to be highly correlated with human monkeypox disease occurrence. The synthetic picture of the potential geographic distribution of human monkeypox in Africa resulting from this study should support ongoing epidemiologic and ecological studies, as well as help to guide public health intervention strategies to areas at highest risk for human monkeypox.
- Subjects :
- Disease occurrence
animal diseases
viruses
Public Health and Epidemiology
lcsh:Medicine
Theoretical ecology
World Health Organization
Trees
Monkeypox
Virology
parasitic diseases
medicine
Animals
Humans
Monkeypox virus
lcsh:Science
Ecosystem
Ecological niche
Multidisciplinary
biology
Ecology
Geography
lcsh:R
Human monkeypox
virus diseases
respiratory system
Models, Theoretical
biology.organism_classification
medicine.disease
Environmental niche modelling
Geographic distribution
Infectious Diseases
Africa
lcsh:Q
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 2
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PloS one
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4c9e67f4cd45c725f0fbcf299f03b5a7