Reptile, Amphibian and Fish Conservation Netherlands, PO Box 1413, 6501 BK Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Department of Pathology, Bacteriology and Avian Diseases, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ghent University, Salisburylaan 133, 9820 Merelbeke, Belgium.
Proc Biol Sci. 2017 Oct 11;284(1864). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2017.1444.
Unravelling the multiple interacting drivers of host-pathogen coexistence is crucial in understanding how an apparently stable state of endemism may shift towards an epidemic and lead to biodiversity loss. Here, we investigate the apparent coexistence of the global amphibian pathogen (Bd) with populations in The Netherlands over a 7-year period. We used a multi-season mark-recapture dataset and assessed potential drivers of coexistence (individual condition, environmental mediation and demographic compensation) at the individual and population levels. We show that even in a situation with a clear cost incurred by endemic Bd, population sizes remain largely stable. Current environmental conditions and an over-dispersed pathogen load probably stabilize disease dynamics, but as higher temperatures increase infection probability, changing environmental conditions, for example a climate-change-driven rise in temperature, could unbalance the current fragile host-pathogen equilibrium. Understanding the proximate mechanisms of such environmental mediation and of site-specific differences in infection dynamics can provide vital information for mitigation actions.
揭示宿主-病原体共存的多种相互作用的驱动因素对于理解为什么一种明显稳定的地方病状态可能会转变为流行,并导致生物多样性丧失至关重要。在这里,我们调查了全球两栖动物病原体(Bd)与荷兰 7 年来的种群共存的明显现象。我们使用了一个多季节的标记-重捕数据集,并在个体和种群水平上评估了共存的潜在驱动因素(个体状况、环境介导和人口补偿)。我们表明,即使在地方病 Bd 造成明显代价的情况下,种群规模仍然基本稳定。当前的环境条件和过度分散的病原体负荷可能稳定了疾病动态,但随着温度升高增加了感染的可能性,环境条件的变化,例如气候变化导致的温度上升,可能会打破当前脆弱的宿主-病原体平衡。了解这种环境介导的近似机制以及感染动态的特定地点差异,可以为缓解行动提供重要信息。