Edward Grey Institute, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
PLoS One. 2012;7(11):e48545. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0048545. Epub 2012 Nov 21.
Emerging infectious diseases of wildlife can have severe effects on host populations and constitute a pressing problem for biodiversity conservation. Paridae pox is an unusually severe form of avipoxvirus infection that has recently been identified as an emerging infectious disease particularly affecting an abundant songbird, the great tit (Parus major), in Great Britain. In this study, we study the invasion and establishment of Paridae pox in a long-term monitored population of wild great tits to (i) quantify the impact of this novel pathogen on host fitness and (ii) determine the potential threat it poses to population persistence. We show that Paridae pox significantly reduces the reproductive output of great tits by reducing the ability of parents to fledge young successfully and rear those young to independence. Our results also suggested that pathogen transmission from diseased parents to their offspring was possible, and that disease entails severe mortality costs for affected chicks. Application of multistate mark-recapture modelling showed that Paridae pox causes significant reductions to host survival, with particularly large effects observed for juvenile survival. Using an age-structured population model, we demonstrate that Paridae pox has the potential to reduce population growth rate, primarily through negative impacts on host survival rates. However, at currently observed prevalence, significant disease-induced population decline seems unlikely, although pox prevalence may be underestimated if capture probability of diseased individuals is low. Despite this, because pox-affected model populations exhibited lower average growth rates, this emerging infectious disease has the potential to reduce the resilience of populations to other environmental factors that reduce population size.
野生动物新发传染病会对宿主种群造成严重影响,是生物多样性保护面临的紧迫问题。Paridae 痘是一种异常严重的禽痘病毒感染形式,最近被确定为一种新发传染病,尤其影响到英国丰富的鸣禽大山雀(Parus major)。在这项研究中,我们研究了 Paridae 痘在长期监测的野生大山雀种群中的入侵和建立,以:(i)量化这种新病原体对宿主适应性的影响;(ii)确定它对种群持续存在的潜在威胁。我们发现,Paridae 痘通过降低父母成功育雏和育雏至独立的能力,显著降低了大山雀的繁殖输出。我们的研究结果还表明,患病父母将病原体传染给其后代是可能的,并且疾病会给受感染的雏鸟带来严重的死亡率代价。多状态标记-重捕模型的应用表明,Paridae 痘会导致宿主生存率显著降低,特别是对幼鸟生存率的影响较大。使用年龄结构的种群模型,我们表明 Paridae 痘有可能降低种群增长率,主要是通过对宿主生存率的负面影响。然而,根据目前观察到的流行率,似乎不太可能导致疾病引起的种群显著下降,尽管如果患病个体的捕获概率较低,那么痘病的流行率可能被低估。尽管如此,由于受痘病影响的模型种群表现出较低的平均增长率,这种新发传染病有可能降低种群对其他降低种群数量的环境因素的恢复能力。