Gilbert Martin, Miquelle Dale G, Goodrich John M, Reeve Richard, Cleaveland Sarah, Matthews Louise, Joly Damien O
Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, New York, United States of America; Boyd Orr Centre for Population and Ecosystem Health, Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Oct 29;9(10):e110811. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110811. eCollection 2014.
Lethal infections with canine distemper virus (CDV) have recently been diagnosed in Amur tigers (Panthera tigris altaica), but long-term implications for the population are unknown. This study evaluates the potential impact of CDV on a key tiger population in Sikhote-Alin Biosphere Zapovednik (SABZ), and assesses how CDV might influence the extinction potential of other tiger populations of varying sizes. An individual-based stochastic, SIRD (susceptible-infected-recovered/dead) model was used to simulate infection through predation of infected domestic dogs, and/or wild carnivores, and direct tiger-to-tiger transmission. CDV prevalence and effective contact based on published and observed data was used to define plausible low- and high-risk infection scenarios. CDV infection increased the 50-year extinction probability of tigers in SABZ by 6.3% to 55.8% compared to a control population, depending on risk scenario. The most significant factors influencing model outcome were virus prevalence in the reservoir population(s) and its effective contact rate with tigers. Adjustment of the mortality rate had a proportional impact, while inclusion of epizootic infection waves had negligible additional impact. Small populations were found to be disproportionately vulnerable to extinction through CDV infection. The 50-year extinction risk in populations consisting of 25 individuals was 1.65 times greater when CDV was present than that of control populations. The effects of density dependence do not protect an endangered population from the impacts of a multi-host pathogen, such as CDV, where they coexist with an abundant reservoir presenting a persistent threat. Awareness of CDV is a critical component of a successful tiger conservation management policy.
最近,阿穆尔虎(东北虎,学名:Panthera tigris altaica)被诊断出感染了致死性犬瘟热病毒(CDV),但其对该种群的长期影响尚不清楚。本研究评估了CDV对锡霍特-阿林生物圈保护区(SABZ)中一个关键老虎种群的潜在影响,并评估了CDV如何影响其他不同规模老虎种群的灭绝可能性。基于个体的随机SIRD(易感-感染-康复/死亡)模型被用于模拟通过捕食受感染的家犬和/或野生食肉动物以及老虎之间的直接传播而导致的感染。根据已发表和观察到的数据,CDV患病率和有效接触率被用于定义合理的低风险和高风险感染情景。与对照种群相比,根据风险情景,CDV感染使SABZ中老虎的50年灭绝概率增加了6.3%至55.8%。影响模型结果的最重要因素是储存宿主种群中的病毒患病率及其与老虎之间的有效接触率。死亡率的调整产生了成比例的影响,而纳入动物流行病感染波的额外影响可忽略不计。研究发现,小种群因CDV感染而面临灭绝的风险尤其大。当存在CDV时,由25只个体组成的种群的50年灭绝风险比对照种群高1.65倍。密度依赖性的影响并不能保护濒危种群免受多宿主病原体(如CDV)的影响,在这些种群与大量构成持续威胁的储存宿主共存的情况下。对CDV的认识是成功的老虎保护管理政策的关键组成部分。