4.6 Article

Infection dynamics in ecosystems: on the interaction between red and grey squirrels, pox virus, pine martens and trees

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 18, Issue 183, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2021.0551

Keywords

ecology; epidemiology; reservoir of infection; dilution effect; squirrel pox virus

Funding

  1. Marsden Fund

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Ecological and epidemiological processes and interactions influence each other in various ways, impacting the invasion potential of pathogens and the dynamic behavior of host species. Understanding the complexity of these interactions is crucial for planning interventions, such as conservation efforts, and drawing conclusions about mechanisms and processes involved in pathogen dynamics in natural environments.
Ecological and epidemiological processes and interactions influence each other, positively and negatively, directly and indirectly. The invasion potential of pathogens is influenced by the ecosystem context of their host species' populations. This extends to the capacity of (multiple) host species to maintain their (common) pathogen and the way pathogen dynamics are influenced by changes in ecosystem composition. This paper exemplifies these interactions and consequences in a study of red and grey squirrel dynamics in the UK. Differences and changes in background habitat and trophic levels above and below the squirrel species lead to different dynamic behaviour in many subtle ways. The range of outcomes of the different interactions shows that one has to be careful when drawing conclusions about the mechanisms and processes involved in explaining observed phenomena concerning pathogens in their natural environment. The dynamic behaviour also shows that planning interventions, for example for conservation purposes, benefits from understanding the complexity of interactions beyond the particular pathogen and its threatened host species.

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