Risk mapping of peste des petits ruminants virus spread in nine countries surrounding the black sea: a spatial multicriteria decision analysis approach
Margarida Arede, Daniel Beltrán-Alcrudo, Camilla Benfield, Jordi Casal, Njeumi Felix, Giovanna Ciaravino, Alberto Allepuz

TL;DR
This study maps areas at high risk for the spread of PPR virus in nine Black Sea countries to help prioritize control measures.
Contribution
The study introduces a spatial multicriteria decision analysis approach to identify high-risk regions for PPR spread in the Black Sea region.
Findings
High-risk areas include most of Türkiye, the Bulgaria-Türkiye border, and southern-central Georgia.
Low-risk areas include Belarus, Ukraine, central and northern Bulgaria, and parts of Armenia.
Abstract
Peste des petits ruminants (PPR) is a highly contagious viral disease of small ruminants (SR) with major socioeconomic impacts. Although targeted for global eradication by 2030, PPR continues to spread and reemerge in previously free areas. In countries surrounding the Black Sea, where small ruminant production is critical for rural livelihoods and national economies, PPR is endemic in Türkiye and has recently emerged in neighboring countries, raising concerns about further transboundary spread, including into the European Union. This study, conducted prior to the 2024–2025 outbreaks, aimed to map areas at higher risk for PPR spread following an initial incursion in nine countries surrounding the Black Sea: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bulgaria, Georgia, Republic of Moldova, Romania, Türkiye, and Ukraine. A spatial multicriteria decision analysis (GIS-MCDA) approach was applied using…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirology and Viral Diseases · Immune responses and vaccinations · Poxvirus research and outbreaks
