4.4 Article

Allee Effect from Parasite Spill-Back

期刊

AMERICAN NATURALIST
卷 182, 期 5, 页码 640-652

出版社

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/673238

关键词

disease; conservation; depensation; transmission; fisheries; salmon

资金

  1. University of Otago
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  3. Pacific Institute of Mathematical Sciences International Graduate Training Centre in Mathematical Biology
  4. REACH (Responding to Rapid Environmental Change) Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT)
  5. Canada Research Chair
  6. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology [KUK-C1-013-04]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The exchange of native pathogens between wild and domesticated animals can lead to novel disease threats to wildlife. However, the dynamics of wild host-parasite systems exposed to a reservoir of domesticated hosts are not well understood. A simple mathematical model reveals that the spill-back of native parasites from domestic to wild hosts may cause a demographic Allee effect in the wild host population. A second model is tailored to the particulars of pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) and salmon lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis), for which parasite spill-back is a conservation and fishery concern. In both models, parasite spill-back weakens the coupling of parasite and wild host abundanceparticularly at low host abundancecausing parasites per host to increase as a wild host population declines. These findings show that parasites shared across host populations have effects analogous to those of generalist predators and can similarly cause an unstable equilibrium in a focal host population that separates persistence and extirpation. Allee effects in wildlife arising from parasite spill-back are likely to be most pronounced in systems where the magnitude of transmission from domestic to wild host populations is high because of high parasite abundance in domestic hosts, prolonged sympatry of domestic and wild hosts, a high transmission coefficient for parasites, long-lived parasite larvae, and proximity of domesticated populations to wildlife migration corridors.

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