Centre d'Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive (CEFE), CNRS-UMR 5175 Montpellier Cedex 5, F 34293, France ; Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey, 08544.
Centre d'Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive (CEFE), CNRS-UMR 5175 Montpellier Cedex 5, F 34293, France.
Ecol Evol. 2014 Mar;4(5):568-75. doi: 10.1002/ece3.955. Epub 2014 Jan 28.
The length of intervals between epidemic outbreaks of infectious diseases is critical in epidemiology. In several species of marine mammals and birds, it is pivotal to also consider the life history of the species of concern, as the contact rate between individuals can have a seasonal flux, for example, due to aggregations during the breeding season. Recently, particular interest has been given to the role of the dynamics of immunity in determining the intervals between epidemics in wild animal populations. One potentially powerful, but often neglected, process in this context is the maternal transfer of immunity. Here, we explore theoretically how the transfer of maternal antibodies can delay the recurrence of epidemics using Phocine Distemper in harbor seals as an example of a system in which epidemic outbreaks are followed by pathogen extinction. We show that the presence of temporarily protected newborns can significantly increase the predicted interval between epidemics, and this effect is strongly dependent on the degree of synchrony in the breeding season. Furthermore, we found that stochasticity in the onset of epidemics in combination with maternally acquired immunity increases the predicted intervals between epidemics even more. These effects arise because newborns with maternal antibodies temporarily boost population level immunity above the threshold of herd immunity, particularly when breeding is synchronous. Overall, our results show that maternal antibodies can have a profound influence on the dynamics of wildlife epidemics, notably in gregarious species such as many marine mammals and seabirds.
传染病爆发间隔的长度在流行病学中至关重要。在一些海洋哺乳动物和鸟类中,还必须考虑到所关注物种的生活史,因为个体之间的接触率可能会随季节而变化,例如,由于繁殖季节的聚集。最近,人们特别关注免疫动力学在确定野生动物种群中流行病间隔中的作用。在这种情况下,一个潜在的强大但经常被忽视的过程是免疫的母体转移。在这里,我们以港湾海豹中的犬瘟热为例,从理论上探讨了母体抗体的转移如何延迟流行病的复发。我们表明,暂时受保护的新生儿的存在可以显著增加预测的流行病间隔,并且这种效果强烈依赖于繁殖季节的同步程度。此外,我们发现,流行病的发病随机性与母体获得的免疫力相结合,甚至会进一步增加流行病之间的预测间隔。这些影响的产生是因为具有母体抗体的新生儿会暂时将群体水平的免疫力提高到群体免疫阈值以上,尤其是在繁殖同步的情况下。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,母体抗体可以对野生动物流行病的动态产生深远的影响,特别是在许多海洋哺乳动物和海鸟等群居物种中。