key: cord-0006266-zdxi4tr4 authors: Ngoshe, Yusuf B.; Avenant, Alida; Rostal, Melinda K.; Karesh, William B.; Paweska, Janusz T.; Bagge, Whitney; Jansen van Vuren, Petrus; Kemp, Alan; Cordel, Claudia; Msimang, Veerle; Thompson, Peter N. title: Patterns of Rift Valley fever virus seropositivity in domestic ruminants in central South Africa four years after a large outbreak date: 2020-03-26 journal: Sci Rep DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-62453-6 sha: 7e397dc5770446a6d622f56f37354c1d2fdbb5fd doc_id: 6266 cord_uid: zdxi4tr4 Rift Valley fever (RVF) is a mosquito-borne viral zoonosis showing complex epidemiological patterns that are poorly understood in South Africa. Large outbreaks occur in the central interior at long, irregular intervals, most recently in 2010–2011; however, the level of herd immunity of ruminant livestock, a key determinant of outbreaks, is unknown. During 2015–2016 a cross-sectional study on 234 randomly-selected farms investigated the prevalence, patterns of, and factors associated with, antibodies to RVF virus (RVFV) in livestock in an area heavily affected by that outbreak. A RVFV inhibition ELISA was used to screen 977 cattle, 1,549 sheep and 523 goats and information on potential risk factors was collected using a comprehensive questionnaire. The estimated RVFV seroprevalence, adjusted for survey design, was 42.9% in cattle, 28.0% in sheep and 9.3% in goats, showing a high degree of farm-level clustering. Seroprevalence increased with age and was higher on private vs. communal land, on farms with seasonal pans (temporary, shallow wetlands) and perennial rivers and in recently vaccinated animals. Seropositivity amongst unvaccinated animals born after the last outbreak indicates likely viral circulation during the post-epidemic period. The current level of herd immunity in livestock may be insufficient to prevent another large outbreak, should suitable conditions recur. Seroprevalence and clustering. Within our study area ( Fig. 1) 3,049 animals (977 cattle, 1,549 sheep, and 523 goats) were sampled from 234 farms and tested for antibodies against RVFV using an inhibition ELISA. The crude proportion of positive samples was 20.4% (622/3049), while 31.8% (311/977) cattle, 16 .5% (255/1549) sheep, and 10.7% (56/523) goats were positive. After adjustment for survey design, including sampling fraction and clustering within herd, overall RVFV seroprevalence in domestic ruminants was estimated to be 29.7% (95% CI: 23.9-36.0%). It was 42.9% (95% CI: 35.7-50.4%) in cattle, 28 .0% (95% CI: 21.3-35.4%) in sheep, and 9.3% (95% CI: 5.8-13.9%) in goats. Estimates of herd-level intra-cluster correlation coefficient (ICC, ρ) on the prevalence scale, including only herds or flocks that were not allowed to mix with other species, were 0.26 for cattle (74 herds), 0.19 for sheep (66 flocks) and 0.29 for goats (27 flocks) . On the 155 farms on which vaccination was reported never to have occurred, the estimates of ρ on the prevalence scale for the three species were 0.26, 0.16 and 0.11, respectively. Estimates of ρ on the logistic scale (ρ (l) ), for unvaccinated, single-species herds or flocks, were 0. 36 The raster of predicted RVFV seroprevalence produced by spatially-explicit generalized additive models (Fig. 2) showed a general increase in seroprevalence from south-west to north-east across the study area. The patterns differed somewhat between the species, with higher seroprevalence in cattle in the north-east, in sheep in the south and in goats in the central part of the study area. No apparent clinical signs of RVF were observed on the farms during the survey. Seroprevalence on farms on which RVF had previously been confirmed was 24.7% (95% CI: 21.9-27.7%) compared to 20.9% (95% CI: 19.1-22.9%) on farms where it was not known to have occurred (P = 0.027) ( Table 1 ). Seroprevalence on farms that reported abortions during the past three months was 24.6% (95% CI: 21.6-27.9%) vs. 19 .1% (95% CI: Figure 2 . Geographic distribution of RVFV seropositivity across the study area in all unvaccinated livestock, and in cattle, sheep and goats, produced using a generalized additive model with a Gaussian process basis function. Black dots indicate sampling locations; grey areas demarcate major urban and suburban areas (Bloemfontein and Kimberley). Top panels show mean annual rainfall, elevation above mean sea level and major biomes for the study area. The map was constructed for this publication in Esri ArcGIS 10.2 (https:// www.esri.com) and R version 3.5.1 66 , using the packages "ggplot2", "gridExtra", "rgdal", "sp", "raster", "metR", "ggspatial" and "viridis" (https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/) and assembled in Inkscape 0.92 (https:// inkscape.org), using country and province boundaries, rainfall and elevation data from Esri ArcGIS Online (https://www.esri.com/en-us/store/arcgis-online), biome and urban area data (https://africaopendata.org) available under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) license, and coordinates recorded on the farms during the study. Risk factor analysis. Based on univariate associations with RVFV seropositivity (Table 1) , several variables were selected for inclusion in the multiple logistic regression model. The final multilevel logistic regression model ( Table 2 ) identified significant (P < 0.05) associations of six variables with odds of RVFV seropositivity. After adjustment for the other variables in the model, cattle were more likely to be seropositive than both sheep and goats (P < 0.001), with the difference between sheep and goats not statistically significant (P = 0.142). Odds of seropositivity increased with age (P < 0.001) and was higher on private farms than on communal farms www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ (P < 0.001), in animals that had access to seasonal pans (temporary, shallow wetlands) (P = 0.006) or perennial rivers (P = 0.042), and on farms with a history of vaccination within the past two years (P = 0.040). The random effect for farm nested within district was highly significant (P < 0.001). In a separate multilevel logistic regression model including only unvaccinated animals <4 years old, born on farms that had not vaccinated against RVFV since 2011 (Table 3) , the odds of seropositivity was higher in cattle than in sheep (P = 0.032) and in animals 2 y or older (P = 0.031). In addition, animals with access to a perennial river on the farm were more likely to be seropositive (P = 0.044). This study is the first to estimate RVFV seroprevalence in domestic ruminants in the outbreak-prone central interior of SA and provides an estimate of the seroprevalence during an interepidemic period, four years after the last outbreak, as well as evidence of its association with certain factors. The overall individual animal seroprevalence of RVFV four years after the last outbreak was 29.7%, and it was 43.0% in cattle, 28.0% in sheep, and 9.3% in goats. For cattle and sheep, these results are comparable to seroprevalences reported in 2013 from Kenya 30,31 and Tanzania 32 , six years after the 2006/2007 East African RVF outbreak, bearing in mind that some of the animals in this study were vaccinated for RVF whereas vaccinated herds were excluded from the studies in Kenya and Tanzania 31,32 . After adjustment for confounding, cattle were more likely to be seropositive than both sheep and goats. The differences in seroprevalence between species may be attributed to several factors, including differential vector preference and differences in management system. Several other studies have also reported lower seroprevalences in goats, in Kenya 33 , Rwanda 34 , Comoros 35 , Mozambique 18 and Mauritania 36 . In our study, the higher seroprevalence in cattle, and to a lesser extent sheep, may be partially explained by the fact that cattle and sheep are predominantly commercially reared and farmers in general may place more value on them than on goats; therefore, they were more likely to be vaccinated. Although vaccination history was obtained in the survey and included in the final multivariable model, in most cases the accuracy of this information was dependent on the farmers' recall and misclassification of exposure may have occurred. There is no method for differentiation of vaccinated from infected animals (DIVA), making it impossible to distinguish between antibodies derived from vaccination or natural RVFV infection. The highest seroprevalence was found in animals older than four years in all species tested. This is to be expected since they survived the last outbreak during which they may have been exposed to RVFV and/or vaccinated. However, the 6.3% seropositivity found in unvaccinated cattle, sheep, and goats born since the last outbreak, indicates that subclinical RVFV circulation might have occurred in the study area. This is supported by the fact that, within this sub-group the seroprevalence increased with age, with animals born shortly after the last outbreak more likely to have been exposed. Unreported or subclinical cases are therefore likely to have occurred after the last outbreak. In addition, the association of seropositivity with the recent occurrence of abortions on the farm indicated the possibility of sporadic, unreported cases of RVF having occurred up to four years after the outbreak. In the absence of a chronically infected vertebrate host, survival of the virus through the dry winter period immediately after the outbreak season is believed to be facilitated by overwintering vectors 6 . Two hypotheses have been proposed for RVFV, with varying degrees of investigative evidence, namely survival of the virus in embryonated eggs laid in the dry margins of seasonal wetlands (infected transovarially) 10 and survival of virus in overwintering Culex mosquitoes 37 . The reproductive biology of the members of the Aedes genus, requiring drying of eggs prior to hatching, favours the former hypothesis and that of the multivoltine genus, Culex, favours the latter 38 . Evidence for overwintering of RVFV in adult mosquitoes is lacking but the flavivirus, West Nile virus, has been proven experimentally and observationally to overwinter in Culex species in the temperate regions of the northern hemisphere 39, 40 . In South Africa, quiescent adult female Culex spp., including Cx. theileri, considered to be the main epidemic vector on the inland plateau 12 , have been shown to overwinter 41, 42 . Typical hibernacula for adult mosquitoes include caves, tree-holes and building infrastructure 43 . In the drier interior of South Africa such refuges are restricted to farmsteads or livestock enclosures, although trees do cluster along river banks, which may help explain the association between access to perennial rivers and seropositivity in unvaccinated animals born after the last outbreak. www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Domestic ruminants pastured on private grazing land showed higher seropositivity compared to those reared on communal land. Communal farmers, who were likely less informed about the economic importance of RVF, were less likely to have vaccinated their animals. Although vaccination history was included in the multivariable model, it is likely that inaccuracy in these data, as well as the fact that the majority of communal farmers were unsure of their animals' vaccination status, resulted in failure to fully account for this confounding. It is also likely that private farms were in general situated in better farming areas, with more water available and therefore more suitable for vector breeding and disease transmission. As expected, higher odds of seropositivity were found in domestic ruminants that had access to seasonal pans and rivers on the farm, where mosquito vector abundance is likely to be higher and which is a putative RVF risk factor 6, 14, 16, 44 . Vaccination was associated with RVFV seropositivity only if it had been done within the past 1-2 years, and only 37% of animals reported to have been vaccinated against RVFV were seropositive. Although, as discussed above, vaccination history may sometimes not have been reliable, this raises questions regarding the efficacy of vaccines administered on farms, which may have been affected by conditions during transport, storage, handling and administration. The live Smithburn RVF vaccine has been reported to evoke long lasting, and even lifelong, immunity, but with a poorer antibody response in cattle 6 . Seropositivity after vaccination with Clone 13 RVF vaccine has been reported to persist for at least 1 year, but the vaccine induces different levels of immune responses in domestic ruminants, being highly immunogenic in sheep and goats and moderately so in cattle 45, 46 . Formalin-inactivated RVF vaccine has been reported to induce high antibody titres and evoke protection for 9 months in cattle, and up to 2 years if a booster is given after 3 months 47, 48 . Further investigation of the duration of immunity following administration of different vaccines is required. The sampling during this study extended from mid-October 2015 to late February 2016. The difference on univariate analysis between seroprevalence in animals sampled in 2015 (19.8%) vs. 2016 (26.1%) raises the possibility that seroprevalence increased over the course of the study, either due to vaccination or natural exposure. However, year was non-significant when included in the multivariable model (P = 0.825), indicating that this was more likely due to confounding with spatial or other factors. In addition, rainfall over the entire study area during the sampling period was well below average 49 , suggesting that mosquito vector abundance would also have been lower than usual and therefore natural viral circulation less likely. The difference in seroprevalence by sex in the univariate analysis was no longer evident when included in the multivariable model and was therefore likely due to confounding by other variables. Some other studies have reported higher seroprevalence in females than in males 20,21,30 , but the reasons for this are unclear and the apparent differences in exposure are likely due to differences in management. The general pattern of increasing seroprevalence from south-west to north-east across the study area is consistent with the geographic trend in rainfall, which likely correlates with the occurrence and extent of suitable habitat for mosquito vectors. However, the variation in RVFV seroprevalence between farms, with estimates of ICC on the prevalence scale for unvaccinated animals between 0.11 and 0.26, indicate that, even within an area prone to RVF outbreaks, the occurrence of infection varies greatly between locations, as reported elsewhere 15, 32, 50 . Care should be taken when comparing published ICCs since some authors report the statistic on the logistic scale, calculated during the estimation of a multilevel logistic regression model. For example, Bett et al. 30 in Kenya reported herd-and village-level ICCs on the logistic scale (ρ (l) ) of 0.3 and 0.22 respectively; our estimates of ρ (l) , ranging between 0.22 and 0.41, were somewhat higher, reflecting greater between-herd variation in seroprevalence than in Kenya, where outbreaks occur more frequently and conditions are likely more conducive to interepidemic viral circulation and widespread exposure 26 . Vaccination may also artificially inflate estimates of ρ, evident in the reduction in estimated ρ when vaccinated herds/flocks were excluded, as when farmers vaccinate they are likely to vaccinate all of the animals at risk, and even if they vaccinate a portion every year it is likely that the older animals were vaccinated previously. In our study area, the presence of large areas without surface water is likely to have resulted in spatial variation in distribution of mosquito vectors. Further, fine-scale differences in local ecological conditions, agricultural practices and type of surface water would have influenced vector abundance and resulted in marked spatial heterogeneity of RVFV exposure. The complexity of the above factors makes it difficult to predict the location and timing of outbreaks. This is illustrated by the recent occurrence of a small outbreak within the study area in April 2018 at the end of the rainy season, affecting only one farm 51 . Attempts to improve our understanding of factors responsible for initiation of outbreaks will likely need to include detailed studies of the ecology and distribution of vectors, their habitats and determinants of their abundance. Further, identifying the geographic determinants of outbreaks will require spatial models with geographic explanatory variables linking these detailed studies at the regional level. On a broader scale, the herd immunity threshold (HIT) is defined as the proportion of the host population required to be immune in order to control transmission and prevent an outbreak 52 . It depends on R 0 , the basic reproduction number, which is defined as the expected number of hosts infected by a single infected host in a fully susceptible population 53 . For a vector-borne disease, R 0 is determined by several factors which may vary in different settings, including the vector to host ratio, the biting rate and the vector survival rate 54 . The HIT for RVF near the start of the 2010 outbreak in our study area was previously estimated to be between 50% and 85%, based on an estimated effective reproduction number that peaked at 4.3 in February 2010 17 . Estimated seroprevalence in our study was well below this range in all three species, indicating that, should conditions similar to those in early 2010 recur, the likelihood of another large outbreak may be high. The overall prevalence of antibodies to RVFV amongst domestic livestock in the central interior of SA four years after the end of a major outbreak was found to be 29.7% and was highest in cattle and lowest in goats. The presence of RVFV IgG antibodies in domestic ruminants born after the last outbreak, and the association of seropositivity with known environmental risk factors for RVF transmission indicate the possibility that viral circulation www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ has taken place during the inter-epidemic period. The current seroprevalence may be below the herd immunity threshold required to prevent another large outbreak should suitable conditions recur and is likely to decline further unless effective vaccination of susceptible livestock is undertaken on a large scale. Study area. A cross-sectional study was conducted during 2015-2016 within a ~40,000 km 2 study area between Bloemfontein and Kimberley in the central interior of SA, an area heavily affected by the 2010-2011 RVF outbreaks (Fig. 1) . Bloemfontein is the capital city of Free State Province, situated on dry savannah at 29.1°S, 26.2°E, at an altitude of 1,395 m above sea level. Kimberley is the capital of Northern Cape Province, located at 28.75°S, 24.75°E, approximately 110 km east of the confluence of the Vaal and Orange Rivers at an altitude of 1,224 m above sea level. The study area lies at the intersection of the Nama-Karoo biome in the centre and south, the Savanna biome in the north-west and the Grassland biome in the east. The climate is semi-arid, with mean annual rainfall varying between 285 mm in the south-western corner to 500 mm in the north-east. The area is traversed by several perennial rivers, with the two largest rivers in SA, the Orange and Vaal, crossing the south-western and north-western corners of the study area, respectively. The landscape is also characterized by the presence of numerous temporary, shallow wetlands, or "pans", of various types, most of which contain water only during times of unusually high rainfall 55 . Study design and sampling strategy. The target population was all cattle, sheep and goats in the study area, including those on commercial, smallholder and communal farms. A two-stage random sampling strategy was used. Random geographic points were used to select farms since no sampling frame of all farms in the study area existed. Random points were generated within the study area, with selection probability proportional to the density of livestock-owning households obtained from the results of the 2011 National Census (K. Parry, Statistics South Africa, 2014, pers. comm.). This was done by first excluding census units (known as small areas) less than ~1 km 2 in extent which, based on Google Earth imagery (http://earth.google.com), represented urban areas, mainly in Bloemfontein and Kimberley. For each of the remaining 262 small areas, a Poisson-distributed random number with mean proportional to the number of livestock-owning households was generated in order to determine the number of points to be generated in each. 350 random geographic points were thus generated using Arc Toolbox in ArcGIS 10.2 (ESRI, Redlands, CA, U.S.A.). Since the exact number of farms to be sampled in order to achieve the required number of each species was unknown, the list was randomly sorted and the points were then sampled in the sequence they appeared on the list; this ensured that the points actually used constituted a random sample. Each point was plotted on a Google Earth map of the study area and the farm nearest to each selected point was identified with the help of state veterinary officials. Sample size. Sample size to estimate a proportion with 95% confidence was calculated for each species as where n = required sample size, P exp = expected prevalence and d = desired absolute precision. Sample size was multiplied by the design effect (D) for multi-stage-stage sampling, calculated as follows 57 : where ρ is the intra-cluster correlation coefficient (ICC) and n is the average cluster size. Due to lack of recent data on seroprevalence of RVF in cattle, sheep, and goats in southern Africa, P exp of 15% for cattle and goats and 25% for sheep were used, based on previously reported seroprevalence elsewhere in Africa. Desired precision was 5%. The ICC for RVF is unknown but for most diseases is unlikely to exceed 0.2 58 ; therefore, using ρ = 0.2 and n = 9, D was calculated as 2.6, and minimum required sample size was 510 for cattle and goats, and 752 for sheep. Animal sampling. Animals were sampled on each selected farm, stratified by age category: 6 months to 2 years (in order to exclude animals with maternal antibodies), 2-4 years (adults born since the last outbreak) and >4 years (alive during the last outbreak in 2011). Where possible, systematic random sampling was done, with three animals of each species selected within each age category. In many cases, however, a combination of haphazard and convenience sampling was used, with farm workers selecting animals from each age category. If the required number of animals in each age group was not available, additional animals were selected from the other age groups. With some exceptions, explained below, a maximum of nine cattle, nine sheep and, nine goats were sampled per farm. In cases where the number of cattle, sheep or goats on the selected farms was less than nine, all the available cattle, sheep or goats were sampled. On farms that reported that they had never vaccinated their animals, up to 50 sheep were sampled, if available, in order to identify seronegative sheep for a parallel cohort study that is still ongoing and will be reported separately. Sampling of farms continued, using the randomly sorted list of co-ordinates, until the minimum required number of each species was achieved. Because goats were the www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ least frequently encountered species, this resulted in greater than the required number of cattle and sheep being sampled. More than nine goats were sampled on some farms in order to achieve the required sample size. Blood samples were collected by venipuncture from the jugular or caudal vein into sterile 8.5 mL evacuated tubes (Vacutainer, BD) with clot activator and gel for serum separation and allowed a minimum of 15 minutes to clot. The samples were then centrifuged using a portable centrifuge (Beckman Coulter Allegra X-22) for 15 min at 1200 g and packaged in a cooler box with ice packs for transportation to the National Institute for Communicable Diseases Special Viral Pathogens Unit, Johannesburg. The serum was then aliquotted and stored at −20 °C until analysed. A questionnaire to collect information concerning animal, management, and environmental factors was designed with closed-ended questions and translated into local languages (seSotho, English, and Afrikaans). The questionnaire was piloted on 14 farms just outside the study area. It was administered to farm owners or managers in an interactive format using an electronic tablet by trained individuals and the responses were uploaded into the project database via the internet for storage. The wording of the same questions was modified slightly between questionnaires for domestic farms on private land and those that used communal land. A copy of the questionnaire is given in the Supplementary Information. Laboratory analysis. An inhibition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (iELISA) based on tissue culture-derived whole virus RVFV antigen, with reported diagnostic sensitivity of 93-100% and diagnostic specificity of 99-100% 59,60 , was carried out as previously described with minor modification 59 . Briefly, 96-well ELISA plates (Nunc MaxiSorp, Nunc, Denmark) were coated overnight at 4 °C with 100 μL per well of polyclonal sheep anti-RVFV capture antibody diluted 1:500 in phosphate buffered saline (PBS without Ca and Mg, pH 7.4). Plates were washed three times with 300 μL per well of wash buffer (0.1% Tween-20 in PBS) after overnight incubation. Plates were blocked with 10% skimmed milk in PBS (blocking buffer) and incubated for 1 hour at 37 °C in a humidified chamber, followed by washing as described above. Test and control serum dilutions were prepared by adding 21 μL of undiluted serum into 189 μL of virus or mock antigen diluted 1:10 in diluent buffer (2% skimmed milk in PBS). These sample-antigen dilutions were added in duplicate (100 μL per well) to the washed plate after blocking and incubated for 1 hour at 37 °C in a humidified chamber, followed by washing as described above. Rabbit polyclonal antiserum to the RVFV nucleoprotein at a dilution of 1:2000 was added to all the wells (100 μL per well) and incubated for 1 hour at 37 °C in a humidified chamber, followed by washing as described above. Horseradish peroxidase conjugated anti-rabbit antibody (KPL) diluted 1:6000 was added to all the wells (100 μL per well) and incubated for 1 hour at 37 °C in a humidified chamber, followed by washing as described above. Peroxidase substrate (ABTS, KPL) was added to each well (100 μL) and plates incubated in the dark at room temperature (22-24 °C) for 30 minutes, followed by addition of stop solution (1% sodium dodecyl sulphate). Optical density was measured at 405 nm and the specific activity of each serum calculated by subtracting the OD in the mock antigen well from that in the RVFV antigen well. The mean net OD readings for replicate tests were converted to percentage inhibition value using the equation [(100 − (mean net OD of test sample/mean net OD of negative control)) × 100]. Samples were categorized as positive or negative based on species-specific cut-off values established previously 59 . Data analysis. Questionnaire data were collected using an Android tablet running Open Data Kit software 61 . Data were downloaded, cleaned and combined with the laboratory results using RStudio 62 , and exported to a CSV file and Microsoft Excel was used for additional cleaning before being transferred into Stata 15 (StataCorp, College Station, TX, U.S.A.) for analysis. Analyses were performed for cattle, sheep and goats combined. An animal was defined as seropositive to RVFV if it tested positive using the iELISA. Sampling fraction for each herd was calculated as the proportion of animals sampled in the herd, where a herd was defined as all the animals of one species present on a farm. Overall and species-specific seroprevalences were adjusted to remove the potential bias due to unequal sampling fractions by weighting each observation by the sampling weight, calculated as the inverse of the sampling fraction. In addition, the standard errors of the estimates were adjusted by using a robust variance estimator to account for the clustered sampling design to produce 95% confidence intervals. These analyses were done using the "svy" command in Stata 15. To estimate the degree of clustering on the prevalence scale, ICC (ρ) was calculated separately for each species as follows 63 : where K is the number of herds/flocks, Y i+ is the number of seropositive animals in herd i, n i is the number of animals tested in herd i and P is the overall (unadjusted) seroprevalence. The ICC on the logistic scale (ρ (l) ), with 95% confidence interval, was calculated separately for each species using the variance of the random effect for herd (σ 2 ) estimated in an intercept-only, two-level logistic model of the inhibition ELISA result, as follows 64 : where σ 2 SL = π 2 /3, the variance of the standard logistic distribution. This was done using the "estat icc" post-estimation command in Stata 15. 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R Foundation for Statistical Computing The authors are extremely grateful to the farmers who participated in this study, to the state veterinarians and animal health technicians of Free State and Northern Cape provinces for facilitating identification of farms and contact with the famers and to the One Health field team at ExecuVet who helped with the animal sampling and conducting the surveys. We thank Karissa Whiting for the development of the electronic mobile application for the survey data collection, and Nadia Storm for contributing to laboratory testing. We would also like to thank Dr. Noam Ross for his helpful input regarding the spatial modelling methods. The project depicted (grant number: HDTRA1-14-1-0029) is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense, Defense Threat Reduction Agency. The The dataset analysed during the current study is available from the corresponding author on reasonable request. ExecuVet is a privately run South African veterinary and scientific consulting company that is on contract to EcoHealth Alliance to conduct the day-to-day field work on the Understanding Rift Valley Fever in Republic of South Africa project as funded by DTRA (and reported in the funding statement). This does not alter our adherence to journal policies on sharing data and materials. Supplementary information is available for this paper at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-62453-6.Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to P.N.T.Reprints and permissions information is available at www.nature.com/reprints.Publisher's note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. 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