A dynamic model for estimating adult female mortality from ovarian dissection data for the tsetse fly Glossina pallidipes Austen sampled in Zimbabwe
Sarah F Ackley and
John W Hargrove
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2017, vol. 11, issue 8, 1-20
Abstract:
Human and animal trypanosomiasis, spread by tsetse flies (Glossina spp), is a major public health concern in much of sub-Saharan Africa. The basic reproduction number of vector-borne diseases, such as trypanosomiasis, is a function of vector mortality rate. Robust methods for estimating tsetse mortality are thus of interest for understanding population and disease dynamics and for optimal control. Existing methods for estimating mortality in adult tsetse, from ovarian dissection data, often use invalid assumptions of the existence of a stable age distribution, and age-invariant mortality and capture probability. We develop a dynamic model to estimate tsetse mortality from ovarian dissection data in populations where the age distribution is not necessarily stable. The models correspond to several hypotheses about how temperature affects mortality: no temperature dependence (model 1), identical temperature dependence for mature adults and immature stages, i.e., pupae and newly emerged adults (model 2), and differential temperature dependence for mature adults and immature stages (model 3). We fit our models to ovarian dissection data for G. pallidipes collected at Rekomitjie Research Station in the Zambezi Valley in Zimbabwe. We compare model fits to determine the most probable model, given the data, by calculating the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) for each model. The model that allows for a differential dependence of temperature on mortality for immature stages and mature adults (model 3) performs significantly better than models 1 and 2. All models produce mortality estimates, for mature adults, of approximately 3% per day for mean daily temperatures below 25°C, consistent with those of mark-recapture studies performed in other settings. For temperatures greater than 25°C, mortality among immature classes of tsetse increases substantially, whereas mortality remains roughly constant for mature adults. As a sensitivity analysis, model 3 was simultaneously fit to both the ovarian dissection and trap data; while this fit also produces comparable mortality at temperatures below 25°C, it is not possible to obtain good fits to both data sources simultaneously, highlighting the uncertain correspondence between trap catches and population levels and/or the need for further improvements to our model. The modelling approach employed here could be applied to any substantial time series of age distribution data.Author summary: Trypanosomiasis, spread by tsetse flies (Glossina spp.), is a disease that is fatal for both humans and livestock if left untreated, and is a serious threat to public health in many regions of sub-Saharan Africa. In order to understand the dynamics of the disease it is important also to understand tsetse population dynamics. Tsetse fly mortality estimates are central to this understanding, but are difficult to acquire from wild populations. Previous methods for estimating mortality from age-distribution data assume a stable age structure and age-invariant mortality and capture probability. Based on prior fieldwork, none of these assumptions appears justified. Building on previous mortality estimation techniques, and incorporating what is known about tsetse population dynamics, we develop simulation techniques to estimate mortality for tsetse populations where the age distribution is not necessarily stable. We fit our models to age-distribution data produced in 1991 and 1992 at Rekomitjie Research Station in the Zambezi Valley in Zimbabwe. Our final model produces mortality estimates consistent with those of mark-recapture studies performed in other settings. We find that mortality increases with temperature, a result consistent with field and laboratory findings, and that the temperature effects are much more severe for pupae and newly emerged adults than for mature adults. Our dynamical modelling approach could be used for mortality estimation for any population where substantial age distribution data are available: specifically, it could be used to answer substantive questions about tsetse flies in other settings.
Date: 2017
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pntd00:0005813
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005813
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