4.6 Article

How Multiple Interaction Types Affect Disease Spread and Dilution in Ecological Networks

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2022.862986

Keywords

ecological network; functional guild; species interactions; disease transmission; dilution effect

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31770470]
  2. South African Research Chair Initiative
  3. National Research Foundation of South Africa [89967, 109244]

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This study explores the effects of ecological networks on the transmission of infectious diseases and the relationship between disease and community diversity. The results show that the composition of networks can influence disease spreading and the diversity-disease relationship. Communities with more mutualistic interactions tend to have higher disease prevalence, while communities with a higher diversity from competition and predation can impede disease prevalence.
Ecological communities are composed of different functional guilds that are engaging in multiple types of biotic interactions. We explore how ecological networks fare when confronting infectious diseases according to density-dependent (DD) and frequency-dependent (FD) transmission modes. Our model shows that network compositions can dictate both disease spreading and the relationship between disease and community diversity (including species richness and Shannon's diversity) as depicted in the dilution effect. The disease becomes more prevalent within communities harboring more mutualistic interactions, generating a positive relationship between disease prevalence and community diversity (i.e., an amplification effect). By contrast, in communities with a fixed proportion of mutualistic interactions, higher diversity from the balance of competition and predation can impede disease prevalence (i.e., the dilution effect). Within-species disease prevalence increases linearly with a species' degree centrality. These patterns of disease transmission and the diversity-disease relationship hold for both transmission modes. Our analyses highlight the complex effects of interaction compositions in ecological networks on infectious disease dynamics and further advance the debate on the dilution effect of host diversity on disease prevalence.

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