Elk migration influences the risk of disease spillover in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem

Autor: Nathaniel D. Rayl, Emily S. Almberg, Jennifer D. Jones, Justin A. Gude, Paul C. Cross, Jerod A. Merkle, Kelly M. Proffitt
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
0106 biological sciences
Disease Ecology
wildlife disease
animal diseases
Wildlife
Brucella abortus
Cattle Diseases
Animals
Wild

Wildlife disease
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Brucellosis Brucella abortus
Brucellosis
Ecosystem services
resource selection function
Bison bison
fluids and secretions
Spillover effect
cross‐species pathogen spillover
Grazing
symbols.heraldic_charge
Animals
Applied Ecology
Ecology
Evolution
Behavior and Systematics

Research Articles
Ecosystem
Behavioural Ecology
Demography
partial migration
human–wildlife conflict
Human–wildlife conflict
business.industry
010604 marine biology & hydrobiology
Deer
Ecosystem Ecology
Landscape Ecology
elk Cervus canadensis
Geography
Community Ecology
Spatial Ecology
symbols
Movement Ecology
Animal Science and Zoology
Livestock
Cattle
business
Research Article
Zdroj: The Journal of Animal Ecology
ISSN: 1365-2656
0021-8790
Popis: Wildlife migrations provide important ecosystem services, but they are declining. Within the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), some elk Cervus canadensis herds are losing migratory tendencies, which may increase spatiotemporal overlap between elk and livestock (domestic bison Bison bison and cattle Bos taurus), potentially exacerbating pathogen transmission risk.We combined disease, movement, demographic and environmental data from eight elk herds in the GYE to examine the differential risk of brucellosis transmission (through aborted foetuses) from migrant and resident elk to livestock.For both migrants and residents, we found that transmission risk from elk to livestock occurred almost exclusively on private ranchlands as opposed to state or federal grazing allotments. Weather variability affected the estimated distribution of spillover risk from migrant elk to livestock, with a 7%–12% increase in migrant abortions on private ranchlands during years with heavier snowfall. In contrast, weather variability did not affect spillover risk from resident elk.Migrant elk were responsible for the majority (68%) of disease spillover risk to livestock because they occurred in greater numbers than resident elk. On a per‐capita basis, however, our analyses suggested that resident elk disproportionately contributed to spillover risk. In five of seven herds, we estimated that the per‐capita spillover risk was greater from residents than from migrants. Averaged across herds, an individual resident elk was 23% more likely than an individual migrant elk to abort on private ranchlands.Our results demonstrate links between migration behaviour, spillover risk and environmental variability, and highlight the utility of integrating models of pathogen transmission and host movement to generate new insights about the role of migration in disease spillover risk. Furthermore, they add to the accumulating body of evidence across taxa that suggests that migrants and residents should be considered separately during investigations of wildlife disease ecology. Finally, our findings have applied implications for elk and brucellosis in the GYE. They suggest that managers should prioritize actions that maintain spatial separation of elk and livestock on private ranchlands during years when snowpack persists into the risk period.
The authors examined the influence of elk migration in the risk of disease spillover. Their findings demonstrate links between migration, spillover risk, and environmental variability, highlighting the utility of integrating disease transmission and movement models to generate novel insights about the influence of migration in spillover risk.
Databáze: OpenAIRE