[1]F. Mark Danson,Patrick Giraudoux,David Pleydell,Philip S. Craig.中国中部寄生虫病的景观控制(英文)[J].遥感学报,2007(05):727-730.
F.Mark Danson1, Patrick Giraudoux2, David Pleydell2, et al. Landscape Controls Parasitic Disease Transmission in Central China[J]. Journal of Remote Sensing, 2007,(5):727-730.
[1]F. Mark Danson,Patrick Giraudoux,David Pleydell,Philip S. Craig.中国中部寄生虫病的景观控制(英文)[J].遥感学报,2007(05):727-730. DOI: 10.11834/jrs.20070599.
F.Mark Danson1, Patrick Giraudoux2, David Pleydell2, et al. Landscape Controls Parasitic Disease Transmission in Central China[J]. Journal of Remote Sensing, 2007,(5):727-730. DOI: 10.11834/jrs.20070599.
The laval stage of the fox tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis causes the rare but fatal liver disease Human Aleveolar Echinococcosis(AE).The tapeworm is transmitted in a predator-prey cycle between foxes(or dogs) and a range of small mammal species and is restricted to specific landscape conditions.HAE is endemic in parts of central China with prevalence rates of up to 15% in some villages.This paper describes how remotely sensed data have been used to develop spatially explicit risk maps for the disease based on landscape characterization.The results show that the proximity of grassland or shrubland areas to human settlements
derived from the remotely sensed data
was a major risk factor for HAE related to the spatial distribution of suitable habitat for the small mammal intermediate hosts.