野生动物的栖息地特化减少了城市化景观中病原体的传播。

The American Naturalist Pub Date : 2022-02-01 Epub Date: 2021-12-23 DOI:10.1086/717655
Claire S Teitelbaum, Sonia Altizer, Richard J Hall
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引用次数: 1

摘要

头巾区正在全球范围内扩大,并带来深远的生态后果,包括野生动物与病原体的相互作用。野生动物对城市化的反应存在巨大差异;即使在单一种群中,一些个体也可以专注于城市或自然栖息地类型。这种专业化可以通过改变野生动物的运动和聚集来改变病原体对宿主种群的影响。在这里,我们建立了一个机制模型来探索城市景观中的栖息地专业化如何影响移动宿主种群与不具有免疫力的密度依赖性专业病原体之间的相互作用。我们在一个由资源稳定的城市站点和资源波动的自然站点组成的网络上模拟运动,其中宿主是城市专家、自然专家或使用这两种斑块类型的通才。我们发现,对于通才来说,自然和部分城市景观产生最高的感染率和死亡率,这是由自然地点的高流动率和城市地点的高密度驱动的。然而,栖息地专门化通过限制斑块类型之间的移动,保护宿主免受部分城市景观的负面影响。这些发现表明,栖息地专一化可以通过减少传染病传播使种群受益,但通过减少栖息地类型之间的移动,它也可能以减少其他与移动相关的生态系统功能为代价,例如种子传播和授粉。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Habitat Specialization by Wildlife Reduces Pathogen Spread in Urbanizing Landscapes.

AbstractUrban areas are expanding globally with far-reaching ecological consequences, including for wildlife-pathogen interactions. Wildlife show tremendous variation in their responses to urbanization; even within a single population, some individuals can specialize on urban or natural habitat types. This specialization could alter pathogen impacts on host populations via changes to wildlife movement and aggregation. Here, we build a mechanistic model to explore how habitat specialization in urban landscapes affects interactions between a mobile host population and a density-dependent specialist pathogen that confers no immunity. We model movement on a network of resource-stable urban sites and resource-fluctuating natural sites, where hosts are urban specialists, natural specialists, or generalists that use both patch types. We find that for generalists, natural and partially urban landscapes produce the highest infection prevalence and mortality, driven by high movement rates at natural sites and high densities at urban sites. However, habitat specialization protects hosts from these negative effects of partially urban landscapes by limiting movement between patch types. These findings suggest that habitat specialization can benefit populations by reducing infectious disease transmission, but by reducing movement between habitat types it could also carry the cost of reducing other movement-related ecosystem functions, such as seed dispersal and pollination.

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