Modeling the global distribution of Culicoides imicola : an ensemble approach
Leta, Samson and Fetene, Eyerusalem and Mulatu, Tesfaye and Amenu, Kebede and Jaleta, Megarsa Bedasa and Beyene, Tariku Jibat and Negussie, Haileleul and Revie, Crawford W. (2019) Modeling the global distribution of Culicoides imicola : an ensemble approach. Scientific Reports, 9. 14187. ISSN 2045-2322 (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-50765-1)
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Abstract
Culicoides imicola is a midge species serving as vector for a number of viral diseases of livestock, including Bluetongue, and African Horse Sickness. C. imicola is also known to transmit Schmallenberg virus experimentally. Environmental and demographic factors may impose rapid changes on the global distribution of C. imicola and aid introduction into new areas. The aim of this study is to predict the global distribution of C. imicola using an ensemble modeling approach by combining climatic, livestock distribution and land cover covariates, together with a comprehensive global dataset of geo-positioned occurrence points for C. imicola. Thirty individual models were generated by 'biomod2', with 21 models scoring a true skill statistic (TSS) >0.8. These 21 models incorporated weighted runs from eight of ten algorithms and were used to create a final ensemble model. The ensemble model performed very well (TSS = 0.898 and ROC = 0.991) and indicated high environmental suitability for C. imicola in the tropics and subtropics. The habitat suitability for C. imicola spans from South Africa to southern Europe and from southern USA to southern China. The distribution of C. imicola is mainly constrained by climatic factors. In the ensemble model, mean annual minimum temperature had the highest overall contribution (42.9%), followed by mean annual maximum temperature (21.1%), solar radiation (13.6%), annual precipitation (11%), livestock distribution (6.2%), vapor pressure (3.4%), wind speed (0.8%), and land cover (0.1%). The present study provides the most up-to-date predictive maps of the potential distributions of C. imicola and should be of great value for decision making at global and regional scales.
ORCID iDs
Leta, Samson, Fetene, Eyerusalem, Mulatu, Tesfaye, Amenu, Kebede, Jaleta, Megarsa Bedasa, Beyene, Tariku Jibat, Negussie, Haileleul and Revie, Crawford W. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5018-0340;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 70031 Dates: DateEvent2 October 2019Published17 September 2019AcceptedSubjects: Agriculture > Animal culture
Social Sciences > StatisticsDepartment: Faculty of Science > Computer and Information Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 04 Oct 2019 09:58 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 12:27 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/70031