Nonrandom foraging and resource distributions affect the relationships between host density, contact rates and parasite transmission

IF 7.6 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecology Letters Pub Date : 2024-03-13 DOI:10.1111/ele.14385
Zachary Gajewski, Philip McEmurray, Jeremy Wojdak, Cari McGregor, Lily Zeller, Hannah Cooper, Lisa K. Belden, Skylar Hopkins
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Abstract

Nonrandom foraging can cause animals to aggregate in resource dense areas, increasing host density, contact rates and pathogen transmission, but when should nonrandom foraging and resource distributions also have density-independent effects? Here, we used a factorial experiment with constant resource and host densities to quantify host contact rates across seven resource distributions. We also used an agent-based model to compare pathogen transmission when host movement was based on random foraging, optimal foraging or something between those states. Nonrandom foraging strongly depressed contact rates and transmission relative to the classic random movement assumptions used in most epidemiological models. Given nonrandom foraging in the agent-based model and experiment, contact rates and transmission increased with resource aggregation and average distance to resource patches due to increased host movement in search of resources. Overall, we describe three density-independent mechanisms by which host behaviour and resource distributions alter contact rate functions and pathogen transmission.

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非随机觅食和资源分布会影响宿主密度、接触率和寄生虫传播之间的关系。
非随机觅食会导致动物聚集在资源密集区域,从而增加宿主密度、接触率和病原体传播,但什么时候非随机觅食和资源分布也会产生与密度无关的影响呢?在这里,我们使用了一个资源和宿主密度恒定的因子实验来量化七种资源分布情况下的宿主接触率。我们还使用了一个基于代理的模型,来比较宿主在随机觅食、最优觅食或介于这三种状态之间时的病原体传播情况。与大多数流行病学模型中使用的经典随机移动假设相比,非随机觅食大大降低了接触率和传播率。鉴于基于代理的模型和实验中的非随机觅食,接触率和传播率随着资源聚集和资源斑块平均距离的增加而增加,这是由于宿主为寻找资源而增加了移动。总之,我们描述了宿主行为和资源分布改变接触率函数和病原体传播的三种与密度无关的机制。
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来源期刊
Ecology Letters
Ecology Letters 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
17.60
自引率
3.40%
发文量
201
审稿时长
1.8 months
期刊介绍: Ecology Letters serves as a platform for the rapid publication of innovative research in ecology. It considers manuscripts across all taxa, biomes, and geographic regions, prioritizing papers that investigate clearly stated hypotheses. The journal publishes concise papers of high originality and general interest, contributing to new developments in ecology. Purely descriptive papers and those that only confirm or extend previous results are discouraged.
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