Competition and Facilitation between a Disease and a Predator in a Stunted Prey Population.

The role of diseases and parasites has received relatively little attention in modelling ecological dynamics despite mounting evidence of their importance in structuring communities. In contrast to predators, parasites do not necessarily kill their host but instead they may change host life history....

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Main Authors: Maarten C Boerlijst, André M de Roos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4492505?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-2045168d91284f5a90707739d80f7bac2020-11-24T21:11:17ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01107e013225110.1371/journal.pone.0132251Competition and Facilitation between a Disease and a Predator in a Stunted Prey Population.Maarten C BoerlijstAndré M de RoosThe role of diseases and parasites has received relatively little attention in modelling ecological dynamics despite mounting evidence of their importance in structuring communities. In contrast to predators, parasites do not necessarily kill their host but instead they may change host life history. Here, we study the impact of a parasite that selectively infects juvenile prey individuals and prevents them from maturing into adults. The model is inspired by the Ligula intestinalis tape worm and its cyprinid fish host Rutilis rutilis. We demonstrate that the parasite can promote as well as demote the so-called stunting in its host population, that is, the accumulation of juvenile prey, which leads to strong exploitation competition and consequently to a bottleneck in maturation. If competition between infected and uninfected individuals is strong, stunting will be enhanced and bistability between a stunted and non-stunted prey population occurs. In this case, the disease competes with the predator of its host species, possibly leading to predator extinction. In contrast, if the competition between infected and uninfected individuals is weak, the stunting is relieved, and epi-zoonotic cycles will occur, with recurrent epidemic outbreaks. Here, the disease facilitates the predator, and predator density will be substantially increased. We discuss the implications of our results for the dynamics and structure of the natural Ligula-Roach system.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4492505?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maarten C Boerlijst
André M de Roos
spellingShingle Maarten C Boerlijst
André M de Roos
Competition and Facilitation between a Disease and a Predator in a Stunted Prey Population.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Maarten C Boerlijst
André M de Roos
author_sort Maarten C Boerlijst
title Competition and Facilitation between a Disease and a Predator in a Stunted Prey Population.
title_short Competition and Facilitation between a Disease and a Predator in a Stunted Prey Population.
title_full Competition and Facilitation between a Disease and a Predator in a Stunted Prey Population.
title_fullStr Competition and Facilitation between a Disease and a Predator in a Stunted Prey Population.
title_full_unstemmed Competition and Facilitation between a Disease and a Predator in a Stunted Prey Population.
title_sort competition and facilitation between a disease and a predator in a stunted prey population.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The role of diseases and parasites has received relatively little attention in modelling ecological dynamics despite mounting evidence of their importance in structuring communities. In contrast to predators, parasites do not necessarily kill their host but instead they may change host life history. Here, we study the impact of a parasite that selectively infects juvenile prey individuals and prevents them from maturing into adults. The model is inspired by the Ligula intestinalis tape worm and its cyprinid fish host Rutilis rutilis. We demonstrate that the parasite can promote as well as demote the so-called stunting in its host population, that is, the accumulation of juvenile prey, which leads to strong exploitation competition and consequently to a bottleneck in maturation. If competition between infected and uninfected individuals is strong, stunting will be enhanced and bistability between a stunted and non-stunted prey population occurs. In this case, the disease competes with the predator of its host species, possibly leading to predator extinction. In contrast, if the competition between infected and uninfected individuals is weak, the stunting is relieved, and epi-zoonotic cycles will occur, with recurrent epidemic outbreaks. Here, the disease facilitates the predator, and predator density will be substantially increased. We discuss the implications of our results for the dynamics and structure of the natural Ligula-Roach system.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4492505?pdf=render
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