The causative bacterium of Lyme disease, , expanded from an undetected human pathogen into the etiologic agent of the most common vector-borne disease in the United States over the last several decades. Systematic field collections of the tick vector reveal increases in the geographic range and prevalence of ticks that coincided with increases in human Lyme disease incidence across New York State.We investigate the impact of environmental features on the population dynamics of . Analytical models developed using field collections of nearly 19,000 nymphal and spatially and temporally explicit environmental features accurately explained the variation in the nymphal infection prevalence of across space and time.Importantly, the model identified environmental features reflecting landscape ecology, vertebrate hosts, climatic metrics, climate anomalies and surveillance efforts that can be used to predict the biogeographical patterns of infected ticks into future years and in previously unsampled areas.Forecasting the distribution and prevalence of a pathogen at fine geographic scales offers a powerful strategy to mitigate a serious public health threat. . A decade of environmental and tick data was collected to create a model that accurately predicts the infection prevalence of over space and time. This predictive model can be extrapolated to create a high-resolution risk map of the Lyme disease pathogen for future years that offers an inexpensive approach to improve both ecological management and public health strategies to mitigate disease risk.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9826398PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.14274DOI Listing

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