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Defining ecological regions in Italy based on a multivariate clustering approach: A first step towards a targeted vector borne disease surveillance

TitoloDefining ecological regions in Italy based on a multivariate clustering approach: A first step towards a targeted vector borne disease surveillance
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2019
AutoriIppoliti, Carla, Candeloro Luca, Gilbert Marius, Goffredo Maria, Mancini Giuseppe, Curci Gabriele, Falasca Serena, Tora Susanna, Di Lorenzo Alessio, Quaglia Michela, and Conte Annamaria
RivistaPLoS ONE
Volume14
Type of ArticleArticle
Parole chiavealgorithm, Algorithms, animal, Animals, article, Bluetongue, circannual rhythm, cluster analysis, controlled study, Culicoides, Culicoides imicola, Culicoides obsoletus, Culicoides scoticus, disease surveillance, ecosystem, epidemiological monitoring, geographic mapping, human, Humans, insect vector, Insect Vectors, Italy, landscape, larva, life cycle, Multivariate analysis, nonhuman, Principal component analysis, Rain, scoring system, sheep, species habitat, Vector Borne Diseases, Vegetation, Virology, virus replication, West Nile Fever
Abstract

Ecoregionalization is the process by which a territory is classified in similar areas according to specific environmental and climatic factors. The climate and the environment strongly influence the presence and distribution of vectors responsible for significant human and animal diseases worldwide. In this paper, we developed a map of the eco-climatic regions of Italy adopting a data-driven spatial clustering approach using recent and detailed spatial data on climatic and environmental factors. We selected seven variables, relevant for a broad set of human and animal vector-borne diseases (VBDs): Standard deviation of altitude, mean daytime land surface temperature, mean amplitude and peak timing of the annual cycle of land surface temperature, mean and amplitude of the annual cycle of greenness value, and daily mean amount of rainfall. Principal Component Analysis followed by multivariate geographic clustering using the k-medoids technique were used to group the pixels with similar characteristics into different ecoregions, and at different spatial resolutions (250 m, 1 km and 2 km). We showed that the spatial structure of ecoregions is generally maintained at different spatial resolutions and we compared the resulting ecoregion maps with two datasets related to Bluetongue vectors and West Nile Disease (WND) outbreaks in Italy. The known characteristics of Culicoides imicola habitat were well captured by 2/22 specific ecoregions (at 250 m resolution). Culicoides obsoletus/scoticus occupy all sampled ecoregions, according to its known widespread distribution across the peninsula. WND outbreak locations strongly cluster in 4/22 ecoregions, dominated by human influenced landscape, with intense cultivations and complex irrigation network. This approach could be a supportive tool in case of VBDs, defining pixel-based areas that are conducive environment for VBD spread, indicating where surveillance and prevention measures could be prioritized in Italy. Also, ecoregions suitable to specific VBDs vectors could inform entomological surveillance strategies. © 2019 Ippoliti et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Note

Cited by: 28; All Open Access, Gold Open Access, Green Open Access

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85069268973&doi=10.1371%2fjournal.pone.0219072&partnerID=40&md5=4aee4a10c38c2322a88c3374b022f661
DOI10.1371/journal.pone.0219072
Citation KeyIppoliti2019