Tuesday, January 15, 2013

How the dengue virus makes a home in the city

Like the housefly, the Aedes aegypti mosquito that spreads the dengue virus is a homebody, perfectly adapted to the domestic life of humans.

By Carol Clark

The mosquitoes that spread dengue fever tap into the domestic networks of humans, along with their bloodstreams, finds a study recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

The data from Iquitos, Peru, shows that the trail of the most rapid transmission of human infections does not lead through large, public gathering places, as might be expected, but from house-to-house, as people visit nearby friends and relatives.

“It’s common in a dengue fever outbreak to first treat public places like schools for mosquitoes, but our results show the focus needs to be on residential networks,” says disease ecologist Gonzalo Vazquez-Prokopec.

Vazquez-Prokopec and Uriel Kitron, both from Emory University’s department of environmental studies, conducted the spatial-temporal analysis as co-authors of the study, led by Steve Stoddard and Thomas Scott from the University of California, Davis. The research is part of a major, ongoing dengue project that also includes scientists from the U.S. Navy; the University of Iowa; Tulane University; San Diego State; and researchers in Peru.

“On a global scale, human air travel is known as a driver of dengue virus circulation, but this is the first time we’ve quantified the powerful impact of human movement on the small scale of neighborhoods,” Vazquez-Prokopec says.

Substandard houses in Iquitos are havens for the mosquitoes that spread dengue.

The tropical disease is caused by a virus that is passed from the blood of one person to another through the bites of mosquitoes. Also known as “break-bone fever,” dengue causes debilitating pain leading to the hospitalization of many sufferers. Severe cases can be fatal.

“It is vicious, and rapidly growing as a threat,” Vazquez-Prokopec says.

During the last 50 years, the incidence of dengue has increased 30-fold and more than half the world’s population is now at risk. The World Health Organization estimates that 50-100 million dengue infections occur each year. That number is expected to rise as the climate warms and the trend toward urbanization continues.

During 2009 and 2010, dengue fever emerged for the first time in decades in the contiguous United States, when an outbreak in the Florida Keys led to 93 cases.

“There is no vaccine for dengue. The only way to control outbreaks is to kill the vectors – mosquitoes,” Vazquez-Prokopec says. Many of the places affected have poor public health infrastructure, he adds, so it’s critical to identify the most effective places to spray for the insects.

A 2009 outbreak of dengue in Iquitos killed at least 24 people and drove almost 1,000 sufferers to the hospital, where cots had to be set up in stairwells and hallways to handle the flood of patients.

The researchers tracked and mapped dengue outbreak patterns in two large neighborhoods, encompassing hundreds of homes in Iquitos.

A city of 400,000 located deep in the Amazonian rain forest, Iquitos is essentially an island, only accessible by boat or plane. The city has high unemployment, and the housing is often substandard. Water is stored in open containers in crowded homes that lack air-conditioning, or even window screens. These factors make the homes havens for Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, the primary vector for the dengue virus. These mosquitoes feast almost exclusively on human blood, bite during the day, and have a limited flight range of about 100 meters.

To study how the dengue virus spreads through Iquitos, the researchers tracked and mapped outbreak patterns of two large neighborhoods, encompassing hundreds of homes, over several years. When a case of dengue was confirmed through a blood test, social workers would interview the patient, recording all the places the patient went during the 15 days leading up to the onset of fever. Mosquitos were collected from as many of these locations as possible and tested to determine if they carried the virus.

The data from interviews of 2,000 people was plotted over time and space using geographic information systems (GIS) technology.

“People appear to be getting infected most often in homes, but not necessarily their own homes,” Vazquez-Prokopec says. “The main driver is people visiting friends and relatives in nearby homes.”

Interviews with dengue patients revealed that two-thirds of them had visited the same location.

“We suspect that the importance of human movement that we observed in Iquitos will hold in other populations and for other pathogens transmitted by the mosquitos that spread dengue,” Vazquez-Prokopec says. “The findings provide a different way for thinking about how a vector-borne pathogen may spread through a population, and have implications for better disease surveillance and control.”

Image credits: iStockphoto.com.

Related:
Disease trackers take aim at dengue fever
Dengue fever's growing range and virulence

Monday, January 14, 2013

Chimps play fair in the Ultimatum Game

From Woodruff Health Sciences Center

Chimpanzees have a sense of fairness that was previously seen as uniquely human, finds a study by Emory's Yerkes National Primate Research Center and Georgia State University. The researchers played the Ultimatum Game with the chimpanzees to determine how sensitive the animals are to the reward distribution between two individuals if both need to agree on the outcome.

The findings, published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), suggest a long evolutionary history of the human aversion to inequity, as well as a shared preference for fair outcomes by the common ancestor of humans and apes.

Click here to watch a video of the experiment.

“We used the Ultimatum Game because it is the gold standard to determine the human sense of fairness," says lead author Darby Proctor, a post-doctoral fellow at Yerkes. "In the game, one individual needs to propose a reward division to another individual and then have that individual accept the proposition before both can obtain the rewards. Humans typically offer generous portions, such as 50 percent of the reward, to their partners, and that’s exactly what we recorded in our study with chimpanzees.”

"Until our study," adds co-author Frans de Waal, "the behavioral economics community assumed the Ultimatum Game could not be played with animals, or that animals would choose only the most selfish option while playing. We've concluded that chimpanzees not only get very close to the human sense of fairness, but the animals may actually have exactly the same preferences as our own species."

For purposes of direct comparison, the study was also conducted separately with human children.

Related:
Capuchin economics: Monkeys on unequal pay
Sharing ideas about the concept of fairness

Friday, January 11, 2013

The pandas of our minds

Why do all those people keep staring at me?

We love “The Two-Way” post on NPR.org today, pondering the age-old question of why people find pandas so cute. “The Two-Way” reviews previous articles on the question, including a 2005 one by the Washington Post, and the findings of Emory psychologist Stephan Hamann that “cute” pictures cause increased activity in the brain’s middle orbital cortex:

“Some evidence,” the Post noted, “suggests the brain activity there is greater when the stimulus is ‘neotenous,’ which is to say it has juvenile characteristics – a button nose, big eyes, a large wobbly head, chubby extremities or pudgy cheeks.”

In other words, we’re programmed to be suckers for babies.

Read more on NPR.org.

Related:
Study gives clues to evolution of face recognition

Image: iStockphoto.com.

Monday, January 7, 2013

Burrow into a good book on wildlife traces



“It’s kind of a detective story,” Emory environmental studies professor Anthony Martin says of his latest book, “Life Traces of the Georgia Coast,” published by Indiana University Press.

Written for a general audience, the book describes how life traces – tracks, burrows and other impressions – relate to the natural history and behaviors of plants and animals of the beaches and maritime forests of Georgia’s barrier islands.

Ghost crabs and birds, feral hogs and alligators all leave signs of their activities in the environment. Many of these signs go unnoticed by most of us, simply because we don’t know how to read them.

“In many instances, you won’t see the animals that made these traces,” Martin says. “That’s one of the fantastic aspects of this book: You can use it as a manual for interpreting the natural world around you.”

Martin will give a public talk about the book on the evening of Saturday, January 26, for Atlanta Science Tavern. Click here for details.

Related:
Polar dinosaur tracks open new trail to past
Insider's guide to Georgia's barrier islands
Dinosaur burrows yield clues to climate change

Thursday, January 3, 2013

The art and science of symbiosis



"Art offers scientists a chance to see the systems they work on in a new light,” says Emory biologist Nicole Gerardo. Her lab studies evolution by observing interactions between microbes and other organisms such as aphids and fungus-growing ants.

Gerardo teamed up with Diane Kempler, a lecturer in visual arts, to teach a ceramics course called “Clay and Science: A Symbiotic Relationship.”

The students created pieces that explored everything from the interactions of lichen, bark and trees to the relationship between reading and the brain. You can see these works and others in the video above.

Related:
Prometheus: Seeding wonder and science
Tiny aphids hold big surprises in genome
Farming ants reveal evolution secrets