Potential corridors and barriers for plague spread in central Asia
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 14:56authored byL Wilschut, E Addink, Hans Heesterbeek, L Heier, A Laudisoit, M Begon, Stephen DavisStephen Davis, V Dubyanskiy, L Burdelov, S De Jong
Plague (Yersinia pestis infection) is a vector-borne disease which caused millions of human deaths in the Middle Ages. The hosts of plague are mostly rodents, and the disease is spread by the fleas that feed on them. Currently, the disease still circulates amongst sylvatic rodent populations all over the world, including great gerbil (Rhombomys opimus) populations in Central Asia. Great gerbils are social desert rodents that live in family groups in burrows, which are visible on satellite images. In great gerbil populations an abundance threshold exists, above which plague can spread causing epizootics. The spatial distribution of the host species is thought to influence the plague dynamics, such as the direction of plague spread, however no detailed analysis exists on the possible functional or structural corridors and barriers that are present in this population and landscape. This study aims to fill that gap.