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迁徙动物是感染的超级传播者吗?

Are Migratory Animals Superspreaders of Infection?

作者信息

Fritzsche McKay Alexa, Hoye Bethany J

机构信息

*Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA.

†School of Life & Environmental Sciences, Centre for Integrative Ecology, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria 3220, Australia.

出版信息

Integr Comp Biol. 2016 Aug;56(2):260-7. doi: 10.1093/icb/icw054.

Abstract

Migratory animals are simultaneously challenged by the physiological demands of long-distance movements and the need to avoid natural enemies including parasites and pathogens. The potential for animal migrations to disperse pathogens across large geographic areas has prompted a growing body of research investigating the interactions between migration and infection. However, the phenomenon of animal migration is yet to be incorporated into broader theories in disease ecology. Because migrations may expose animals to a greater number and diversity of pathogens, increase contact rates between hosts, and render them more susceptible to infection via changes to immune function, migration has the potential to generate both "superspreader species" and infection "hotspots". However, migration has also been shown to reduce transmission in some species, by facilitating parasite avoidance ("migratory escape") and weeding out infected individuals ("migratory culling"). This symposium was convened in an effort to characterize more broadly the role that animal migrations play in the dynamics of infectious disease, by integrating a range of approaches and scales across host taxa. We began with questions related to within-host processes, focusing on the consequences of nutritional constraints and strenuous movement for individual immune capability, and of parasite infection for movement capacity. We then scaled-up to between-host processes to identify what types, distances, or patterns of host movements are associated with the spread of infectious agents. Finally, we discussed landscape-scale relationships between migration and infectious disease, and how these may be altered as a result of anthropogenic changes to climate and land use. We are just beginning to scratch the surface of the interactions between infection and animal migrations; yet, with so many migrations now under threat, there is an urgent need to develop a holistic understanding of the potential for migrations to both increase and reduce infection risk.

摘要

迁徙动物同时面临着长途迁徙的生理需求以及躲避包括寄生虫和病原体在内的天敌的需要。动物迁徙将病原体传播到广大地理区域的可能性促使越来越多的研究去探究迁徙与感染之间的相互作用。然而,动物迁徙现象尚未被纳入疾病生态学的更广泛理论中。由于迁徙可能使动物接触到更多种类和数量的病原体,增加宿主之间的接触率,并通过改变免疫功能使它们更容易受到感染,迁徙有可能产生“超级传播物种”和感染“热点”。然而,研究也表明,迁徙在某些物种中也会减少传播,其方式包括促进寄生虫躲避(“迁徙逃逸”)和淘汰受感染个体(“迁徙淘汰”)。本次研讨会旨在通过整合跨宿主类群的一系列方法和尺度,更广泛地描述动物迁徙在传染病动态中所起的作用。我们首先探讨了与宿主体内过程相关的问题,重点关注营养限制和剧烈运动对个体免疫能力的影响,以及寄生虫感染对运动能力的影响。然后我们扩大到宿主间过程,以确定宿主运动的哪些类型、距离或模式与传染病原体的传播有关。最后,我们讨论了迁徙与传染病在景观尺度上的关系,以及这些关系可能如何因气候和土地利用的人为变化而改变。我们才刚刚开始触及感染与动物迁徙之间相互作用的表面;然而,鉴于现在如此多的迁徙受到威胁,迫切需要全面了解迁徙增加和降低感染风险的潜力。

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