Article

Estimating the epidemiology of emerging Xylella fastidiosa outbreaks in olives

Details

Citation

White SM, Navas-Cortés JA, Bullock JM, Boscia D & Chapman DS (2020) Estimating the epidemiology of emerging Xylella fastidiosa outbreaks in olives. Plant Pathology, 69 (8), pp. 1403-1413. https://doi.org/10.1111/ppa.13238

Abstract
Xylella fastidiosa is an important insect‐vectored bacterial plant pathogen with a wide host range, causing significant economic impact in the agricultural and horticultural industries. Once restricted to the Americas, severe European outbreaks have been discovered recently in Italy, Spain, France, and Portugal. The Italian outbreak, detected in Puglia in 2013, has spread over 100 km, killing millions of olive trees, and is still expanding. To date, quantified assessment of important epidemiological parameters useful for risk assessment and management, such as transmission rates, symptomless periods, and time to death in field populations, has been lacking. This is due to the emergent and novel nature of the outbreak and length of time needed to monitor the course of disease progression. To address this, we developed a Bayesian method to infer epidemiological parameters by fitting and comparing compartmental epidemiological models to short snapshots of disease progression observed in multiple field plots. We estimated that each infected tree with symptoms is able to infect around 19 trees per year (95% credible range 14–26). The symptomless stage was estimated to have low to negligible infectivity and to last an average of approximately 1.2 years (95% credible range 1.0–1.3 years). Tree desiccation was estimated to occur approximately 4.3 years (95% credible range 4.0–4.6 years) after symptom appearance. However, we were unable to estimate the infectiousness of desiccated trees from the data. Our method could be used to make early estimates of epidemiological parameters in other emerging disease outbreaks where symptom expression is slow.

Keywords
epidemiological model; Olea europea; olive quick decline syndrome; Philaenus spumarius; SIR; Xylella fastidiosa subsp. pauca

Journal
Plant Pathology: Volume 69, Issue 8

StatusPublished
FundersEuropean Commission (Horizon 2020)
Publication date31/10/2020
Publication date online30/06/2020
Date accepted by journal11/06/2020
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/31497
ISSN0032-0862
eISSN1365-3059

People (1)

People

Dr Daniel Chapman

Dr Daniel Chapman

Senior Lecturer, Biological and Environmental Sciences