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猫头鹰对感染汉坦病毒的田鼠的选择性捕食以及景观特征的混杂效应。

Selective predation on hantavirus-infected voles by owls and confounding effects from landscape properties.

作者信息

Khalil Hussein, Ecke Frauke, Evander Magnus, Hörnfeldt Birger

机构信息

Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Skogsmarksgränd, 901 83, Umeå, Sweden.

Department of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.

出版信息

Oecologia. 2016 Jun;181(2):597-606. doi: 10.1007/s00442-016-3580-y. Epub 2016 Feb 12.

Abstract

It has been suggested that predators may protect human health through reducing disease-host densities or selectively preying on infected individuals from the population. However, this has not been tested empirically. We hypothesized that Tengmalm's owl (Aegolius funereus) selectively preys on hantavirus-infected individuals of its staple prey, the bank vole (Myodes glareolus). Bank voles are hosts of Puumala hantavirus, which causes a form of hemorrhagic fever in humans. Selective predation by owls on infected voles may reduce human disease risk. We compared the prevalence of anti-Puumala hantavirus antibodies (seroprevalence), in bank voles cached by owls in nest boxes to seroprevalence in voles trapped in closed-canopy forest around each nest box. We found no general difference in seroprevalence. Forest landscape structure could partly account for the observed patterns in seroprevalence. Only in more connected forest patches was seroprevalence in bank voles cached in nest boxes higher than seroprevalence in trapped voles. This effect disappeared with increasing forest patch isolation, as seroprevalence in trapped voles increased with forest patch isolation, but did not in cached voles. Our results suggest a complex relationship between zoonotic disease prevalence in hosts, their predators, and landscape structure. Some mechanisms that may have caused the seroprevalence patterns in our results include higher bank vole density in isolated forest patches. This study offers future research potential to shed further light on the contribution of predators and landscape properties to human health.

摘要

有人提出,捕食者可能通过降低疾病宿主密度或有选择地捕食种群中受感染的个体来保护人类健康。然而,这一点尚未得到实证检验。我们假设长耳鸮(Aegolius funereus)会有选择地捕食其主要猎物——棕背䶄(Myodes glareolus)中感染汉坦病毒的个体。棕背䶄是普马拉汉坦病毒的宿主,该病毒会导致人类患上一种出血热。猫头鹰对受感染田鼠的选择性捕食可能会降低人类感染疾病的风险。我们比较了猫头鹰在巢箱中储存的棕背䶄体内抗普马拉汉坦病毒抗体的流行率(血清阳性率)与在每个巢箱周围封闭树冠森林中捕获的田鼠的血清阳性率。我们发现血清阳性率没有总体差异。森林景观结构可以部分解释观察到的血清阳性率模式。只有在连接性更强的森林斑块中,巢箱中储存的棕背䶄的血清阳性率才高于捕获田鼠的血清阳性率。随着森林斑块隔离度的增加,这种效应消失了,因为捕获田鼠的血清阳性率随森林斑块隔离度增加,而储存田鼠的血清阳性率则不然。我们的研究结果表明,宿主中的人畜共患病流行率、它们的捕食者和景观结构之间存在复杂的关系。一些可能导致我们研究结果中血清阳性率模式的机制包括孤立森林斑块中棕背䶄密度较高。这项研究为进一步阐明捕食者和景观特性对人类健康的贡献提供了未来的研究潜力。

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