As ecologic niche modeling (ENM) evolves as a tool in spatial epidemiology and public health, selection of the most appropriate and informative environmental data sets becomes increasingly important. Here, we build on a previous ENM analysis of the potential distribution of human monkeypox in Africa by refining georeferencing criteria and using more-diverse environmental data to identify environmental parameters contributing to monkeypox distributional ecology. Significant environmental variables include annual precipitation, several temperature-related variables, primary productivity, evapotranspiration, soil moisture, and pH. The potential distribution identified with this set of variables was broader than that identified in previous analyses but does not include areas recently found to hold monkeypox in southern Sudan. Our results emphasize the importance of selecting the most appropriate and informative environmental data sets for ENM analyses in pathogen transmission mapping.
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1 April 2012
ECOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY OF HUMAN MONKEYPOX CASE OCCURRENCES ACROSS AFRICA
Christine K. Ellis,
Darin S. Carroll,
Ryan R. Lash,
A. Townsend Peterson,
Inger K. Damon,
Jean Malekani,
Pierre Formenty
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Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Vol. 48 • No. 2
April 2012
Vol. 48 • No. 2
April 2012
Ecologic niche modeling
epidemiology
georeferencing
monkeypox
point-radius method