Transmission of infectious diseases en route to habitat hotspots.

BACKGROUND: The spread of infectious diseases in wildlife populations is influenced by patterns of between-host contacts. Habitat "hotspots"--places attracting a large numbers of individuals or social groups--can significantly alter contact patterns and, hence, disease propagation. Researc...

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Main Authors: Julio Benavides, Peter D Walsh, Lauren Ancel Meyers, Michel Raymond, Damien Caillaud
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3282722?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e17c9e6cbd154203bdf1e90a86f30f002020-11-25T00:11:17ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0172e3129010.1371/journal.pone.0031290Transmission of infectious diseases en route to habitat hotspots.Julio BenavidesPeter D WalshLauren Ancel MeyersMichel RaymondDamien CaillaudBACKGROUND: The spread of infectious diseases in wildlife populations is influenced by patterns of between-host contacts. Habitat "hotspots"--places attracting a large numbers of individuals or social groups--can significantly alter contact patterns and, hence, disease propagation. Research on the importance of habitat hotspots in wildlife epidemiology has primarily focused on how inter-individual contacts occurring at the hotspot itself increase disease transmission. However, in territorial animals, epidemiologically important contacts may primarily occur as animals cross through territories of conspecifics en route to habitat hotspots. So far, the phenomenon has received little attention. Here, we investigate the importance of these contacts in the case where infectious individuals keep visiting the hotspots and in the case where these individuals are not able to travel to the hotspot any more. METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We developed a simulation epidemiological model to investigate both cases in a scenario when transmission at the hotspot does not occur. We find that (i) hotspots still exacerbate epidemics, (ii) when infectious individuals do not travel to the hotspot, the most vulnerable individuals are those residing at intermediate distances from the hotspot rather than nearby, and (iii) the epidemiological vulnerability of a population is the highest when the number of hotspots is intermediate. CONCLUSIONS AND SIGNIFICANCE: By altering animal movements in their vicinity, habitat hotspots can thus strongly increase the spread of infectious diseases, even when disease transmission does not occur at the hotspot itself. Interestingly, when animals only visit the nearest hotspot, creating additional artificial hotspots, rather than reducing their number, may be an efficient disease control measure.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3282722?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julio Benavides
Peter D Walsh
Lauren Ancel Meyers
Michel Raymond
Damien Caillaud
spellingShingle Julio Benavides
Peter D Walsh
Lauren Ancel Meyers
Michel Raymond
Damien Caillaud
Transmission of infectious diseases en route to habitat hotspots.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Julio Benavides
Peter D Walsh
Lauren Ancel Meyers
Michel Raymond
Damien Caillaud
author_sort Julio Benavides
title Transmission of infectious diseases en route to habitat hotspots.
title_short Transmission of infectious diseases en route to habitat hotspots.
title_full Transmission of infectious diseases en route to habitat hotspots.
title_fullStr Transmission of infectious diseases en route to habitat hotspots.
title_full_unstemmed Transmission of infectious diseases en route to habitat hotspots.
title_sort transmission of infectious diseases en route to habitat hotspots.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description BACKGROUND: The spread of infectious diseases in wildlife populations is influenced by patterns of between-host contacts. Habitat "hotspots"--places attracting a large numbers of individuals or social groups--can significantly alter contact patterns and, hence, disease propagation. Research on the importance of habitat hotspots in wildlife epidemiology has primarily focused on how inter-individual contacts occurring at the hotspot itself increase disease transmission. However, in territorial animals, epidemiologically important contacts may primarily occur as animals cross through territories of conspecifics en route to habitat hotspots. So far, the phenomenon has received little attention. Here, we investigate the importance of these contacts in the case where infectious individuals keep visiting the hotspots and in the case where these individuals are not able to travel to the hotspot any more. METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We developed a simulation epidemiological model to investigate both cases in a scenario when transmission at the hotspot does not occur. We find that (i) hotspots still exacerbate epidemics, (ii) when infectious individuals do not travel to the hotspot, the most vulnerable individuals are those residing at intermediate distances from the hotspot rather than nearby, and (iii) the epidemiological vulnerability of a population is the highest when the number of hotspots is intermediate. CONCLUSIONS AND SIGNIFICANCE: By altering animal movements in their vicinity, habitat hotspots can thus strongly increase the spread of infectious diseases, even when disease transmission does not occur at the hotspot itself. Interestingly, when animals only visit the nearest hotspot, creating additional artificial hotspots, rather than reducing their number, may be an efficient disease control measure.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3282722?pdf=render
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