Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309, USA.
Nature. 2013 Feb 14;494(7436):230-3. doi: 10.1038/nature11883.
Accelerating rates of species extinctions and disease emergence underscore the importance of understanding how changes in biodiversity affect disease outcomes. Over the past decade, a growing number of studies have reported negative correlations between host biodiversity and disease risk, prompting suggestions that biodiversity conservation could promote human and wildlife health. Yet the generality of the diversity-disease linkage remains conjectural, in part because empirical evidence of a relationship between host competence (the ability to maintain and transmit infections) and the order in which communities assemble has proven elusive. Here we integrate high-resolution field data with multi-scale experiments to show that host diversity inhibits transmission of the virulent pathogen Ribeiroia ondatrae and reduces amphibian disease as a result of consistent linkages among species richness, host composition and community competence. Surveys of 345 wetlands indicated that community composition changed nonrandomly with species richness, such that highly competent hosts dominated in species-poor assemblages whereas more resistant species became progressively more common in diverse assemblages. As a result, amphibian species richness strongly moderated pathogen transmission and disease pathology among 24,215 examined hosts, with a 78.4% decline in realized transmission in richer assemblages. Laboratory and mesocosm manipulations revealed an approximately 50% decrease in pathogen transmission and host pathology across a realistic diversity gradient while controlling for host density, helping to establish mechanisms underlying the diversity-disease relationship and their consequences for host fitness. By revealing a consistent link between species richness and community competence, these findings highlight the influence of biodiversity on infection risk and emphasize the benefit of a community-based approach to understanding infectious diseases.
物种灭绝和疾病出现的速度正在加快,这突显了了解生物多样性变化如何影响疾病结果的重要性。在过去的十年中,越来越多的研究报告称,宿主生物多样性与疾病风险之间存在负相关关系,这促使人们提出生物多样性保护可以促进人类和野生动物健康的建议。然而,多样性与疾病之间的联系的普遍性仍然是推测性的,部分原因是宿主竞争力(维持和传播感染的能力)与群落组装顺序之间关系的经验证据一直难以捉摸。在这里,我们整合了高分辨率的实地数据和多尺度实验,结果表明,宿主多样性抑制了 Ribeiroia ondatrae 这种高毒病原体的传播,并降低了两栖动物疾病的发病率,这是因为物种丰富度、宿主组成和群落竞争力之间存在一致的联系。对 345 个湿地的调查表明,群落组成随物种丰富度的变化而发生非随机变化,即高竞争力的宿主在物种贫乏的组合中占主导地位,而更具抗性的物种在多样化的组合中则变得越来越普遍。因此,在 24215 个被检查的宿主中,两栖动物的物种丰富度强烈调节了病原体的传播和疾病病理学,在较丰富的组合中,实际传播率下降了 78.4%。实验室和中观实验揭示了,在控制宿主密度的情况下,跨现实多样性梯度的病原体传播和宿主病理学大约减少了 50%,这有助于确定多样性与疾病关系的机制及其对宿主适应性的影响。这些发现通过揭示物种丰富度与群落竞争力之间的一致联系,突显了生物多样性对感染风险的影响,并强调了采用基于群落的方法来理解传染病的好处。