Smith Lesley A, Fox Naomi J, Marion Glenn, Booth Naomi J, Morris Alex M M, Athanasiadou Spiridoula, Hutchings Michael R
Animal and Veterinary Sciences, Scotland's Rural College (SRUC), West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JG, UK.
Biomathematics and Statistics Scotland (BioSS), Kings Buildings, Edinburgh EH9 3FD, UK.
Animals (Basel). 2024 Jun 25;14(13):1876. doi: 10.3390/ani14131876.
Behaviour is often the fundamental driver of disease transmission, where behaviours of individuals can be seen to scale up to epidemiological patterns seen at the population level. Here we focus on animal behaviour, and its role in parasite transmission to track its knock-on consequences for parasitism, production and pollution. Livestock face a nutrition versus parasitism trade-off in grazing environments where faeces creates both a nutritional benefit, fertilizing the surrounding sward, but also a parasite risk from infective nematode larvae contaminating the sward. The grazing decisions of ruminants depend on the perceived costs and benefits of the trade-off, which depend on the variations in both environmental (e.g., amounts of faeces) and animal factors (e.g., physiological state). Such grazing decisions determine the intake of both nutrients and parasites, affecting livestock growth rates and production efficiency. This impacts on the greenhouse gas costs of ruminant livestock production via two main mechanisms: (1) slower growth results in longer durations on-farm and (2) parasitised animals produce more methane per unit food intake. However, the sensitivity of behaviour to host parasite state offers opportunities for early detection of parasitism and control. Remote monitoring technology such as accelerometers can detect parasite-induced sickness behaviours soon after exposure, before impacts on growth, and thus may be used for targeting individuals for early treatment. We conclude that livestock host x parasite interactions are at the centre of the global challenges of food security and climate change, and that understanding livestock behaviour can contribute to solving both.
行为往往是疾病传播的根本驱动因素,个体行为可以放大到在种群水平上观察到的流行病学模式。在这里,我们关注动物行为及其在寄生虫传播中的作用,以追踪其对寄生虫感染、生产和污染的连锁影响。在放牧环境中,牲畜面临着营养与寄生虫感染之间的权衡,粪便既能带来营养益处,使周围草地肥沃,也会带来寄生虫风险,因为感染性线虫幼虫会污染草地。反刍动物的放牧决策取决于这种权衡中感知到的成本和收益,而这又取决于环境因素(如粪便量)和动物因素(如生理状态)的变化。这种放牧决策决定了营养物质和寄生虫的摄入量,影响牲畜的生长速度和生产效率。这通过两种主要机制影响反刍动物生产的温室气体成本:(1)生长缓慢导致在农场的饲养时间延长;(2)感染寄生虫的动物每单位食物摄入量产生更多甲烷。然而,行为对宿主寄生虫状态的敏感性为寄生虫感染的早期检测和控制提供了机会。加速度计等远程监测技术可以在感染寄生虫后不久、在对生长产生影响之前检测到寄生虫引起的疾病行为,因此可用于针对个体进行早期治疗。我们得出结论,牲畜宿主与寄生虫的相互作用是粮食安全和气候变化这两大全球挑战的核心,了解牲畜行为有助于解决这两个问题。