Spatial Epidemiology Lab (SpELL), Université Libre de Bruxelles, Bruxelles, Belgium.
Institute of Infection, Veterinary & Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
J Anim Ecol. 2022 Aug;91(8):1719-1730. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13751. Epub 2022 Jun 14.
Anthropogenic activities and natural events such as periodic tree masting can alter resource provisioning in the environment, directly affecting animals, and potentially impacting the spread of infectious diseases in wildlife. The impact of these additional resources on infectious diseases can manifest through different pathways, affecting host susceptibility, contact rate and host demography. To date however, empirical research has tended to examine these different pathways in isolation, for example by quantifying the effects of provisioning on host behaviour in the wild or changes in immune responses in controlled laboratory studies. Furthermore, while theory has investigated the interactions between these pathways, this work has focussed on a narrow subset of pathogen types, typically directly transmitted microparasites. Given the diverse ways that provisioning can affect host susceptibility, contact patterns or host demography, we may expect the epidemiological consequences of provisioning to vary among different parasite types, dependent on key aspects of parasite life history, such as the duration of infection and transmission mode. Focusing on an exemplar empirical system, the wood mouse Apodemus sylvaticus, and its diverse parasite community, we developed a suite of epidemiological models to compare how resource provisioning alters responses for a range of these parasites that vary in their biology (microparasite and macroparasite), transmission mode (direct, environmental and vector transmitted) and duration of infection (acute, latent and chronic) within the same host population. We show there are common epidemiological responses to host resource provisioning across all parasite types examined. In particular, the epidemiological impact of provisioning could be driven in opposite directions, depending on which host pathways (contact rate, susceptibility or host demography) are most altered by the addition of resources to the environment. Broadly, these responses were qualitatively consistent across all parasite types, emphasising the importance of identifying general trade-offs between provisioning-altered parameters. Despite the qualitative consistency in responses to provisioning across parasite types, we predicted notable quantitative differences between parasites, with directly transmitted parasites (those conforming to SIR and SIS frameworks) predicted to show the strongest responses to provisioning among those examined, whereas the vector-borne parasites showed negligible responses to provisioning. As such, these analyses suggest that different parasites may show different scales of response to the same provisioning scenario, even within the same host population. This highlights the importance of knowing key aspects of host-parasite biology, to understand and predict epidemiological responses to provisioning for any specific host-parasite system.
人为活动和自然事件,如周期性的树木结实,可以改变环境中的资源供应,直接影响动物,并可能影响野生动物中传染病的传播。这些额外资源对传染病的影响可以通过不同的途径表现出来,影响宿主易感性、接触率和宿主种群动态。然而,迄今为止,实证研究往往孤立地研究这些不同的途径,例如通过量化野外提供资源对宿主行为的影响,或在受控实验室研究中量化免疫反应的变化。此外,尽管理论已经研究了这些途径之间的相互作用,但这项工作集中在病原体类型的一个狭窄子集上,通常是直接传播的微生物寄生虫。鉴于提供资源可以影响宿主易感性、接触模式或宿主种群动态的方式多种多样,我们可以预期,提供资源对不同寄生虫类型的流行病学后果会因寄生虫生活史的关键方面而异,例如感染持续时间和传播模式。以一个典型的实证系统,即森林鼠(Apodemus sylvaticus)及其多样化的寄生虫群落为研究对象,我们开发了一套流行病学模型,用于比较资源供应如何改变不同寄生虫的反应,这些寄生虫在生物学(微生物寄生虫和宏观寄生虫)、传播模式(直接、环境和媒介传播)和感染持续时间(急性、潜伏和慢性)方面存在差异。我们发现,在所研究的所有寄生虫类型中,宿主资源供应都有共同的流行病学反应。特别是,资源供应的流行病学影响可能会朝着相反的方向发展,这取决于环境中资源的增加对宿主的哪些途径(接触率、易感性或宿主种群动态)产生最大的影响。总的来说,这些反应在所有寄生虫类型中都是定性一致的,强调了确定资源供应改变参数之间的一般权衡关系的重要性。尽管所有寄生虫类型对资源供应的反应在定性上是一致的,但我们预测不同寄生虫之间会有显著的定量差异,与那些检查过的寄生虫相比,直接传播的寄生虫(那些符合 SIR 和 SIS 框架的寄生虫)对资源供应的反应最强,而媒介传播的寄生虫对资源供应几乎没有反应。因此,这些分析表明,即使在同一宿主种群中,不同的寄生虫对相同的资源供应场景可能表现出不同的反应规模。这突出了了解宿主-寄生虫生物学关键方面的重要性,以便理解和预测任何特定宿主-寄生虫系统对资源供应的流行病学反应。