Mathematical Ecology Research Group, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK.
Balliol College, Broad Street, Oxford OX1 3BJ, UK.
J R Soc Interface. 2019 Jul 26;16(156):20190270. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2019.0270. Epub 2019 Jul 31.
Vector ecology is integral to understanding the transmission of vector-borne diseases, with processes such as reproduction and competition pivotal in determining vector presence and abundance. The arbovirus vectors Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus compete as larvae, but this mechanism is insufficient to explain patterns of coexistence and exclusion. Inviable interspecies matings-known as reproductive interference-is another candidate mechanism. Here, we analyse mathematical models of mosquito population dynamics and epidemiology which include two Aedes-specific features of reproductive interference. First, as these mosquitoes use hosts to find mates, reproductive interference will only occur if the same host is visited. Host choice will, in turn, be determined by behavioural responses to host availability. Second, females can become sterilized after mis-mating with heterospecifics. We find that a species with an affinity for a shared host will suffer more from reproductive interference than a less selective competitor. Costs from reproductive interference can be 'traded-off' against costs from larval competition, leading to competitive outcomes that are difficult to predict from empirical evidence. Sterilizations of a self-limiting species can counterintuitively lead to higher densities than a competitor suffering less sterilization. We identify that behavioural responses and reproductive interference mediate a concomitant relationship between vector ecological dynamics and epidemiology. Competitors with opposite behavioural responses can maintain disease where human hosts are rare, due to vector coexistence facilitated by a reduced cost from reproductive interference. Our work elucidates the relative roles of the competitive mechanisms governing Aedes populations and the associated epidemiological consequences.
向量生态学是理解媒介传播疾病的重要组成部分,其中繁殖和竞争等过程对于确定媒介的存在和丰度至关重要。虫媒病毒的传播媒介埃及伊蚊和白纹伊蚊在幼虫期相互竞争,但这种机制不足以解释它们共存和排斥的模式。另一种候选机制是不可育的种间交配,称为生殖干扰。在这里,我们分析了包含两种与生殖干扰相关的特定于埃及伊蚊特征的蚊子种群动态和流行病学的数学模型。首先,由于这些蚊子利用宿主寻找配偶,只有在访问相同宿主时才会发生生殖干扰。宿主选择反过来又会受到对宿主可用性的行为反应的影响。其次,雌性在与异性交配后可能会绝育。我们发现,与共享宿主亲和力更强的物种将比选择能力较弱的竞争物种遭受更多的生殖干扰。生殖干扰的成本可以与幼虫竞争的成本相权衡,从而导致难以从经验证据预测的竞争结果。具有自我限制特性的物种的绝育会反直觉地导致比遭受较少绝育的竞争者更高的密度。我们确定行为反应和生殖干扰调节了媒介生态动力学和流行病学之间的伴随关系。由于生殖干扰成本降低,具有相反行为反应的竞争者可以在人类宿主稀少的情况下维持疾病,从而促进媒介共存。我们的工作阐明了控制埃及伊蚊种群的竞争机制的相对作用以及相关的流行病学后果。