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  4. Classification and prediction of river network ephemerality and its relevance for waterborne disease epidemiology
 
research article

Classification and prediction of river network ephemerality and its relevance for waterborne disease epidemiology

Perez-Saez, Javier  
•
Mande, Theophile  
•
Larsen, Joshua
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2017
Advances In Water Resources

The transmission of waterborne diseases hinges on the interactions between hydrology and ecology of hosts, vectors and parasites, with the long-term absence of water constituting a strict lower bound. However, the link between spatio-temporal patterns of hydrological ephemerality and waterborne disease transmission is poorly understood and difficult to account for. The use of limited biophysical and hydroclimate information from otherwise data scarce regions is therefore needed to characterize, classify, and predict river network ephemerality in a spatially explicit framework. Here, we develop a novel large-scale ephemerality classification and prediction methodology based on monthly discharge data, water and energy availability, and remote-sensing measures of vegetation, that is relevant to epidemiology, and maintains a mechanistic link to catchment hydrologic processes. Specifically, with reference to the context of Burkina Faso in sub-Saharan Africa, we extract a relevant set of catchment covariates that include the aridity index, annual runoff estimation using the Budyko framework, and hysteretical relations between precipitation and vegetation. Five ephemerality classes, from permanent to strongly ephemeral, are defined from the duration of 0-flow periods that also accounts for the sensitivity of river discharge to the long-lasting drought of the 70's-80's in West Africa. Using such classes, a gradient-boosted tree-based prediction yielded three distinct geographic regions of ephemerality. Importantly, we observe a strong epidemiological association between our predictions of hydrologic ephemerality and the known spatial patterns of schistosomiasis, an endemic parasitic waterborne disease in which infection occurs with human-water contact, and requires aquatic snails as an intermediate host. The general nature of our approach and its relevance for predicting the hydrologic controls on schistosomiasis occurrence provides a pathway for the explicit inclusion of hydrologic drivers within epidemiological models of waterborne disease transmission.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.advwatres.2017.10.003
Web of Science ID

WOS:000418262400020

Author(s)
Perez-Saez, Javier  
Mande, Theophile  
Larsen, Joshua
Ceperley, Natalie  
Rinaldo, Andrea  
Date Issued

2017

Publisher

Elsevier Sci Ltd

Published in
Advances In Water Resources
Volume

110

Start page

263

End page

278

Subjects

Ecohydrology

•

Schistosomiasis

•

Hydrologic ephemerality

•

Water resources development

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECHO  
Available on Infoscience
January 15, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/144075
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