Colorado Parks and Wildlife, Grand Junction, CO, USA.
U.S. Geological Survey, Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, Bozeman, MT, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2021 May;90(5):1264-1275. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13452. Epub 2021 Mar 26.
Wildlife migrations provide important ecosystem services, but they are declining. Within the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), some elk Cervus canadensis herds are losing migratory tendencies, which may increase spatiotemporal overlap between elk and livestock (domestic bison Bison bison and cattle Bos taurus), potentially exacerbating pathogen transmission risk. We combined disease, movement, demographic and environmental data from eight elk herds in the GYE to examine the differential risk of brucellosis transmission (through aborted foetuses) from migrant and resident elk to livestock. For both migrants and residents, we found that transmission risk from elk to livestock occurred almost exclusively on private ranchlands as opposed to state or federal grazing allotments. Weather variability affected the estimated distribution of spillover risk from migrant elk to livestock, with a 7%-12% increase in migrant abortions on private ranchlands during years with heavier snowfall. In contrast, weather variability did not affect spillover risk from resident elk. Migrant elk were responsible for the majority (68%) of disease spillover risk to livestock because they occurred in greater numbers than resident elk. On a per-capita basis, however, our analyses suggested that resident elk disproportionately contributed to spillover risk. In five of seven herds, we estimated that the per-capita spillover risk was greater from residents than from migrants. Averaged across herds, an individual resident elk was 23% more likely than an individual migrant elk to abort on private ranchlands. Our results demonstrate links between migration behaviour, spillover risk and environmental variability, and highlight the utility of integrating models of pathogen transmission and host movement to generate new insights about the role of migration in disease spillover risk. Furthermore, they add to the accumulating body of evidence across taxa that suggests that migrants and residents should be considered separately during investigations of wildlife disease ecology. Finally, our findings have applied implications for elk and brucellosis in the GYE. They suggest that managers should prioritize actions that maintain spatial separation of elk and livestock on private ranchlands during years when snowpack persists into the risk period.
野生动物迁徙提供了重要的生态系统服务,但它们正在减少。在大黄石生态系统(GYE)内,一些麋鹿(Cervus canadensis)种群正在失去迁徙倾向,这可能增加麋鹿和牲畜(家养野牛(Bison bison)和牛(Bos taurus))之间的时空重叠,从而增加病原体传播的风险。我们结合了 GYE 内八个麋鹿种群的疾病、运动、人口和环境数据,研究了从迁徙和居留麋鹿向牲畜传播布鲁氏菌病(通过流产胎儿)的差异风险。对于迁徙和居留麋鹿,我们发现,从麋鹿向牲畜传播的风险几乎完全发生在私人牧场,而不是州或联邦放牧地。天气变化影响了从迁徙麋鹿向牲畜溢出风险的估计分布,在降雪量较大的年份,私人牧场上迁徙麋鹿流产的风险增加了 7%-12%。相比之下,天气变化并没有影响居留麋鹿的溢出风险。迁徙麋鹿对牲畜疾病溢出风险的贡献最大(68%),因为它们的数量多于居留麋鹿。然而,按人均计算,我们的分析表明,居留麋鹿不成比例地增加了溢出风险。在七个牧群中的五个中,我们估计,从居留麋鹿到牲畜的人均溢出风险大于从迁徙麋鹿。在所有牧群中,个体居留麋鹿在私人牧场上流产的可能性比个体迁徙麋鹿高 23%。我们的研究结果表明,迁徙行为、溢出风险和环境变化之间存在联系,并强调了整合病原体传播和宿主运动模型的实用性,以生成有关迁徙在疾病溢出风险中的作用的新见解。此外,它们增加了跨分类群的越来越多的证据,这些证据表明,在调查野生动物疾病生态学时,应分别考虑迁徙者和居留者。最后,我们的研究结果对 GYE 中的麋鹿和布鲁氏菌病具有实际意义。它们表明,在积雪持续到风险期的年份,管理者应优先采取行动,在私人牧场上维持麋鹿和牲畜的空间分离。