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Integrating snake distribution, abundance and expert‐derived behavioural traits predicts snakebite risk

Authors :
Kris A. Murray
Rikki Gumbs
Peter J. Diggle
Joseph J. Erinjery
Gerardo Heinze Martin
Anuradhani Kasturiratne
Hithanadura Janaka de Silva
Ruchira Somaweera
Dileepa Senajith Ediriweera
David G. Lalloo
Takuya Iwamura
Source :
Journal of Applied Ecology. 59:611-623
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Despite important implications for human health, distribution, abundance and behaviour of most medically-relevant snakes remain poorly understood. Such data deficiencies hamper efforts to characterise the causal pathways of snakebite envenoming and to prioritise management options in the areas at greatest risk. We estimated the spatial patterns of abundance of seven medically-relevant snake species from Sri Lanka, a snakebite hotspot, and combined them with indices of species’ relative abundance, aggressiveness and envenoming severity obtained from an expert opinion survey to test whether these fundamental ecological traits could explain spatial patterns of snakebite and envenoming incidence. The spatial intensity of snake occurrence records in relation to independent environmental factors (fundamental niches and land cover) was analysed with point process models. Then, with the estimated patterns of abundance, we tested which species’ abundances added together, with and without weightings for aggressiveness, envenoming severity and relative abundance, best correlate with per-capita geographic incidence patterns of snakebite and envenoming. We found that weighting abundance patterns by species’ traits increased correlation with incidence. The best performing combination had three species weighted by aggressiveness and abundance, with a correlation of r = 0.47 (P < 0.01) with snakebite incidence. An envenoming severity and relative abundance-weighted combination of two species was the most strongly associated with envenoming incidence (r = 0.46, P = 0). Synthesis and applications. We show that snakebite risk is explained by abundance, aggressiveness and envenoming severity of the snake species most frequently involved in envenoming cases. Incorporating causality via ecological information of key snake species is critical for snakebite risk mapping, help to tailor preventive measures for dominant snake species and deploy the necessary antivenom therapies.

Details

ISSN :
13652664 and 00218901
Volume :
59
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Applied Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........82177edeb9dee677af2ae2fb3260a119