The emergence and shift in seasonality of Lyme borreliosis in Northern Europe
Goren, Asena; Viljugrein, Hildegunn; Rivrud, Inger Maren; Jore, Solveig; Bakka, Haakon; Vindenes, Yngvild; Mysterud, Atle
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
Date
2023Metadata
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Original version
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Biological Sciences. 2023, 290 (1993), 1-9. 10.1098/rspb.2022.2420Abstract
Climate change has had a major impact on seasonal weather patterns, resulting in marked phenological changes in a wide range of taxa. However, empirical studies of how changes in seasonality impact the emergence and seasonal dynamics of vector-borne diseases have been limited. Lyme borreliosis, a bacterial infection spread by hard-bodied ticks, is the most commonvector-borne disease in the northern hemisphere and has been rapidly increasing in both incidence and geographical distribution in many regions of Europe and North America. By analysis of long-term surveillance data (1995–2019) from across Norway (latitude 57°580–71°080 N), we demonstrate a marked change in the within-year timing of Lyme borreliosis cases accompanying an increase in the annual number of cases. The seasonal peak in cases is now six weeks earlier than 25 years ago, exceeding seasonal shifts in plant phenology and previous model predictions. The seasonal shift occurred predominantly in the first 10 years of the study period. The concurrent upsurgence in case number and shift in case timing indicate a major change in the Lyme borreliosis disease system over recent decades. This study highlights the potential for climate change to shape the seasonal dynamics of vector-borne disease systems. seasonality, vector-borne zoonoses,disease ecology, Lyme borreliosis,Lyme disease, climate change, ecology, health and disease and epidemiology