Ecological niche modeling for surveillance of foot-and-mouth disease in South Asia
Umanga Gunasekera, Moh A. Alkhamis, Sumathy Puvanendiran, Moumita Das, Pradeep L. Kumarawadu, Munawar Sultana, M. Anwar Hossain, Jonathan Arzt, Andres Perez, Nussieba A. Osman, Nussieba A. Osman, Nussieba A. Osman

TL;DR
This study uses ecological niche modeling to identify high-risk areas for foot-and-mouth disease in South Asia, helping improve regional surveillance strategies.
Contribution
The study introduces a machine learning-based ecological niche model to account for under-reporting and identify FMD risk factors in South Asia.
Findings
Sri Lanka and Bangladesh showed low to medium FMD outbreak risk (0.04–0.55).
India's data was used to train the model, which achieved high accuracy (>0.87) through cross-validation.
Key predictors of FMD outbreaks include production systems, isothermality, cattle density, and mean diurnal range.
Abstract
Control of transboundary diseases at a regional level is commended over the country level due to its inherent complexities. World Organization for Animal Health (WOAH) has established different zones worldwide to control such contagious diseases as foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). Controlling FMD is difficult because of the complicated connection between FMD risk factors, and the deficits of surveillance activities in countries. We used an ecological niche model (ENM) that accounts for the under-reporting of outbreaks to determine FMD risk and risk factors in South Asian countries India, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. Centered on known outbreak information, we predicted high-risk areas using similar regional ecological features. Using a multi-algorithm machine-learning ensemble that includes random forest, support vector, and gradient boosting, 15 predictive variables (i.e., livestock…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Vector-Borne Animal Diseases · Animal Behavior and Welfare Studies
