Kürschner Tobias, Scherer Cédric, Radchuk Viktoriia, Blaum Niels, Kramer-Schadt Stephanie
Department of Ecological Dynamics Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research Berlin Germany.
Plant Ecology and Nature Conservation University of Potsdam Potsdam Germany.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Feb 20;14(2):e11065. doi: 10.1002/ece3.11065. eCollection 2024 Feb.
Throughout the last decades, the emergence of zoonotic diseases and the frequency of disease outbreaks have increased substantially, fuelled by habitat encroachment and vectors overlapping with more hosts due to global change. The virulence of pathogens is one key trait for successful invasion. In order to understand how global change drivers such as habitat homogenization and climate change drive pathogen virulence evolution, we adapted an established individual-based model of host-pathogen dynamics. Our model simulates a population of social hosts affected by a directly transmitted evolving pathogen in a dynamic landscape. Pathogen virulence evolution results in multiple strains in the model that differ in their transmission capability and lethality. We represent the effects of global change by simulating environmental changes both in time (resource asynchrony) and space (homogenization). We found an increase in pathogenic virulence and a shift in strain dominance with increasing landscape homogenization. Our model further indicated that lower virulence is dominant in fragmented landscapes, although pulses of highly virulent strains emerged under resource asynchrony. While all landscape scenarios favoured co-occurrence of low- and high-virulent strains, the high-virulence strains capitalized on the possibility for transmission when host density increased and were likely to become dominant. With asynchrony likely to occur more often due to global change, our model showed that a subsequent evolution towards lower virulence could lead to some diseases becoming endemic in their host populations.
在过去几十年中,由于栖息地受到侵占以及全球变化导致病媒与更多宿主重叠,人畜共患病的出现和疾病暴发的频率大幅增加。病原体的毒力是成功入侵的一个关键特征。为了了解栖息地同质化和气候变化等全球变化驱动因素如何推动病原体毒力进化,我们采用了一个已建立的基于个体的宿主-病原体动力学模型。我们的模型模拟了在动态景观中受直接传播的进化病原体影响的群居宿主种群。病原体毒力进化在模型中产生了多种毒株,它们在传播能力和致死率方面存在差异。我们通过模拟时间(资源不同步)和空间(同质化)上的环境变化来体现全球变化的影响。我们发现,随着景观同质化程度的增加,致病力增强,毒株优势发生转变。我们的模型还表明,在破碎化景观中低毒力毒株占主导地位,尽管在资源不同步的情况下会出现高毒力毒株脉冲。虽然所有景观情景都有利于低毒力和高毒力毒株共存,但高毒力毒株利用宿主密度增加时的传播可能性,很可能成为优势毒株。由于全球变化可能更频繁地出现不同步情况,我们的模型表明,随后向低毒力的进化可能导致一些疾病在其宿主种群中成为地方病。