environmental transmission
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marguerite Johnson ◽  
Christopher MacGlover ◽  
Erika Peckham ◽  
Halcyon Killion ◽  
Samantha E. Allen ◽  
...  

Mycoplasma bovis is an economically important bacterial pathogen of cattle and bison that most commonly causes pneumonia, polyarthritis and mastitis. M. bovis is prevalent in cattle and commercial bison; however, infections in other host species are rare. In early 2019, we identified the first known cases of M. bovis in free-ranging pronghorn (Antilocapra americana). Here we report on additional pronghorn mortalities caused by M. bovis occurring in the same geographic region of northeastern Wyoming one year later. Genetic analysis by multilocus sequence typing (MLST) revealed that the mortalities were caused by the same M. bovis sequence type, which is unique among all sequence types documented in North America. To determine if pronghorn maintain chronic infections and to assess M. bovis status in other sympatric species, we performed surveillance in free-ranging ungulates. We found no evidence of subclinical infections in pronghorn (n=231) or mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) (n=231) based on PCR testing of nasal swabs. To assess the likelihood of environmental transmission from livestock to pronghorn, we examined persistence of M. bovis in various substrates and conditions, revealing that M. bovis remains viable for 6 hours following inoculation of shaded water, and up to 3 hours in direct sunlight substrates. Our results indicate that environmental transmission of M. bovis from livestock to pronghorn is possible, and seasonality of infection could be due to shared resources during the late winter. This study also highlights the importance of further investigations to better understand transmission dynamics, to assess population level impacts to pronghorn, and to determine disease risks among other ungulate taxa.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (12) ◽  
pp. e1009652
Author(s):  
Lee Benson ◽  
Ross S. Davidson ◽  
Darren M. Green ◽  
Andrew Hoyle ◽  
Mike R. Hutchings ◽  
...  

Variants of the susceptible-infected-removed (SIR) model of Kermack & McKendrick (1927) enjoy wide application in epidemiology, offering simple yet powerful inferential and predictive tools in the study of diverse infectious diseases across human, animal and plant populations. Direct transmission models (DTM) are a subset of these that treat the processes of disease transmission as comprising a series of discrete instantaneous events. Infections transmitted indirectly by persistent environmental pathogens, however, are examples where a DTM description might fail and are perhaps better described by models that comprise explicit environmental transmission routes, so-called environmental transmission models (ETM). In this paper we discuss the stochastic susceptible-exposed-infected-removed (SEIR) DTM and susceptible-exposed-infected-removed-pathogen (SEIR-P) ETM and we show that the former is the timescale separation limit of the latter, with ETM host-disease dynamics increasingly resembling those of a DTM when the pathogen’s characteristic timescale is shortened, relative to that of the host population. Using graphical posterior predictive checks (GPPC), we investigate the validity of the SEIR model when fitted to simulated SEIR-P host infection and removal times. Such analyses demonstrate how, in many cases, the SEIR model is robust to departure from direct transmission. Finally, we present a case study of white spot disease (WSD) in penaeid shrimp with rates of environmental transmission and pathogen decay (SEIR-P model parameters) estimated using published results of experiments. Using SEIR and SEIR-P simulations of a hypothetical WSD outbreak management scenario, we demonstrate how relative shortening of the pathogen timescale comes about in practice. With atttempts to remove diseased shrimp from the population every 24h, we see SEIR and SEIR-P model outputs closely conincide. However, when removals are 6-hourly, the two models’ mean outputs diverge, with distinct predictions of outbreak size and duration.


2021 ◽  
Vol 117 ◽  
pp. 74-80
Author(s):  
C-J. Fraenkel ◽  
B. Böttiger ◽  
A. Söderlund-Strand ◽  
M. Inghammar

2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryohei Saito ◽  
Akifumi Imamura ◽  
Hiroshi Nishiura

Abstract Background A hepatitis A epidemic occurred among men who have sex with men (MSM) in Japan in 2017–2018. In this study, we employ a parsimonious mathematical model to epidemiologically investigate the dynamics of infection, aiming to evaluate the effectiveness of campaign-based interventions among MSM to raise awareness of the situation. Methods A mathematical model describing a mixture of human-to-human transmission and environmental transmission was fitted to surveillance data. Taking seasonally varying environmental transmission into account, we estimated the reproduction number of hepatitis A virus during the course of epidemic, and, especially, the abrupt decline in this reproduction number following campaign-based interventions. Results The reproduction number prior to the countermeasures ranged from 2.6 to 3.1 and then began to decrease following campaign-based interventions. After the first countermeasure, the reproduction number decreased, but the epidemic remained supercritical (i.e., Rt > 1). The value of Rt dropped well below one following the second countermeasure, which used web articles to widely disseminate information about the epidemic risk. Conclusions Although the effective reproduction number, Rt, changes because of both intrinsic and extrinsic factors, the timing of the examined countermeasures against hepatitis A in the MSM population was consistent with the abrupt declines observed in Rt. Even without vaccination, the epidemic was brought under control, and risky behaviors may have been changed by the increase in situation awareness reached through web articles.


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (19) ◽  
pp. 2756
Author(s):  
Liliana Alzate-Gaviria ◽  
Raul Tapia-Tussell ◽  
Jorge Domínguez-Maldonado ◽  
Rubi Chable-Villacis ◽  
Gabriela Rosiles González ◽  
...  

Bioelectrochemical technologies offer alternative ways of treating wastewater and using this process to generate electricity. However, research in this area is just beginning to consider environmental transmission of viruses present in wastewater. The viral fecal indicator coliphage MS2 (the most frequently used pathogen model) was used in this study, since it is a well-known indigenous wastewater virus. The scaled-up bioelectrochemical system had a working volume of 167 L and coliphage MS2 concentration decreased from 8000 to 285 PFU/mL. The kinetics were quantified up to 15 h, after which excessive yeast growth in the system prevented further bacteriophage determination. The logarithmic reduction value (LRV) calculated within the first three hours was 3.8. From 4 hours to 14, LRV values were from 4.1 to 4.8, and in hour 15 the LRV increased to 5.3, yielding a more than 90% reduction. Overall, results obtained indicate that the scaled-up bioelectrochemical treatment system was efficient in reducing coliphage MS2 densities and could be used as a model to explore its further applicability for the reduction of viruses or pathogens in treated effluents.


Author(s):  
Myrna M.T. de Rooij ◽  
Reina S. Sikkema ◽  
Martijn Bouwknegt ◽  
Yvette De Geus ◽  
Kamelia Stanoeva ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 288 (1956) ◽  
pp. 20210621
Author(s):  
Lukas P. Bell-Dereske ◽  
Sarah E. Evans

Leaf fungal endophytes (LFEs) contribute to plant growth and responses to stress. Fungi colonize leaves through maternal transmission, e.g. via the seed, and through environmental transmission, e.g. via aerial dispersal. The relative importance of these two pathways in assembly and function of the LFE community is poorly understood. We used amplicon sequencing to track switchgrass ( Panicum virgatum ) LFEs in a greenhouse and field experiment as communities assembled from seed endophytes and rain fungi (integration of wet and dry aerial dispersal) in germinating seeds, seedlings, and adult plants. Rain fungi varied temporally and hosted a greater portion of switchgrass LFE richness (greater than 65%) than were found in seed endophytes (greater than 25%). Exposure of germinating seeds to rain inoculum increased dissimilarity between LFE communities and seed endophytes, increasing the abundance of rain-derived taxa, but did not change diversity. In the field, seedling LFE composition changed more over time, with a decline in seed-derived taxa and an increase in richness, in response to environmental transmission than LFEs of adult plants. We show that environmental transmission is an important driver of LFE assembly, and likely plant growth, but its influence depends on both the conditions at the time of colonization and plant life stage.


AIP Advances ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 085019
Author(s):  
Tao Jin ◽  
Yong Xu ◽  
Chenwei Dai ◽  
Xiuhong Zhou ◽  
Qinghua Xu ◽  
...  

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