Effects of climatic and environmental factors on mosquito population inferred from West Nile virus surveillance in Greece
Mosquito-borne diseases’ impact on human health is among the most prominent of all
communicable diseases. With limited pool of tools to contrast these diseases, public health focus
remains preventing mosquito-human contacts. Applying a hierarchical spatio-temporal Bayesian
model on West Nile virus (WNV) surveillance data from Greece, we aimed to investigate the impact
of climatic and environmental factors on Culex mosquitoes’ population. Our spatio-temporal analysis
confirmed climatic factors as major drivers of WNV-transmitting-Culex mosquitoes population
dynamics, with temperature and long periods of moderate-to-warm climate having the strongest
positive effect on mosquito abundance. Conversely, rainfall, high humidity, and wind showed a
negative impact. The results suggest the presence of statistically significant differences in the effect of
regional and seasonal characteristics, highlighting the complex interplay between climatic,
geographical and environmental factors in the dynamics of mosquito populations. This study may
represent a relevant tool to inform public health policymakers in planning preventive measures.
FERRACCIOLI Federico;
RICCETTI Nicola;
FASANO Augusto;
MOURELATOS Spiros;
KIOUTSIOUKIS Ioannis;
STILIANAKIS Nikolaos;
2024-02-06
NATURE PORTFOLIO
JRC134911
2041-1723 (online),
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-45666-3,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC134911,
10.1038/s41598-023-45666-3 (print),
Additional supporting files
| File name | Description | File type | |