Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 53706, USA.
Am Nat. 2011 May;177(5):691-7. doi: 10.1086/659632.
The relative roles of top-down and bottom-up forces in affecting disease prevalence in wild hosts is important for understanding disease dynamics and human disease risk. We found that the prevalence of Sin Nombre virus (SNV), the agent of a severe disease in humans (hantavirus pulmonary syndrome), in island deer mice from the eight California Channel Islands was greater with increased precipitation (a measure of productivity), greater island area, and fewer species of rodent predators. In finding a strong signal of the ecological forces affecting SNV prevalence, our work highlights the need for future work to understand the relative importance of average rodent density, population fluctuations, behavior, and specialist predators as they affect SNV prevalence. In addition to illustrating the importance of both bottom-up and top-down limitation of disease prevalence, our results suggest that predator richness may have important bearing on the risk of exposure to animal-borne diseases that affect humans.
在影响野生动物宿主疾病流行中,自上而下和自下而上力量的相对作用对于理解疾病动态和人类疾病风险很重要。我们发现,在来自加利福尼亚海峡群岛的 8 个岛屿上的鹿鼠中,辛诺波病毒(SNV)的流行程度(一种严重疾病人类汉坦病毒肺综合征的病原体)随着降水(生产力的衡量标准)的增加、岛屿面积的增加和啮齿动物捕食者种类的减少而增加。在发现影响 SNV 流行的生态力量的强烈信号时,我们的工作强调了未来需要了解平均啮齿动物密度、种群波动、行为和专门捕食者对 SNV 流行的相对重要性,因为它们会影响 SNV 流行。除了说明疾病流行的自下而上和自上而下限制的重要性之外,我们的结果还表明,捕食者丰富度可能对人类受动物传播疾病的暴露风险有重要影响。