Interplay between contact risk, conspecific density, and landscape connectivity: An individual-based modeling framework
Authored by Daniel Fortin, Olivia Tardy, Ariane Masse, Fanie Pelletier
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2018.02.003
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Abstract
In many host-pathogen systems, pathogen transmission requires close
contact between infectious and susceptible hosts. The contact rates
among individuals depend upon how they move in the landscape because
functional connectivity can affect interactions between individuals. Yet
few studies have explored the interplay between contact rates,
conspecific density, and functional connectivity. Using a spatially
explicit individual-based model, we investigated how empirical movement
rules translate into spatial patterns of contact rates among disease
hosts in complex landscapes. We developed dynamic models of functional
connectivity by characterizing movement behaviors of radio-collared
raccoons, which are the main hosts of the raccoon rabies virus. On this
basis, we simulated space-use dynamics of raccoons in virtual landscapes
varying in conspecific density, forest availability, and landscape
connectivity. We then characterized spatial patterns in the density of
per capita contact rates of simulated raccoons. Radio-collared raccoons
were more likely to choose large habitat patches that were reached by
traveling along least-cost paths, and had relatively long residence
times in anthropogenic areas, especially during daytime. These movement
rules that were applied to simulated raccoons in virtual landscapes
revealed three key patterns in contact rates. First, few simulated
raccoons were responsible for most contacts between individuals, a
pattern that emerged even though all simulated raccoons obeyed the same
movement rules. Second, per capita contact rates increased linearly with
individual density under most conditions, which indicates that raccoon
rabies transmission should be density-dependent rather than frequency
dependent. Third, functional connectivity created a broad range of
patterns in the density of per capita contact rates from decreasing to
increasing values, depending upon the availability of land cover types.
Overall, the contacts between hosts tended to occur at highest densities
in forests, anthropogenic areas, and agricultural corridors. We show
that complex patterns of contact rates can emerge from simple empirical
movement rules and, therefore, can be key drivers of disease spread
dynamics. The strong spatial heterogeneity observed in contact rates
implies that the effectiveness of particular control interventions can
strongly vary depending upon host density, landscape composition, and
functional connectivity. This study provides key functional
relationships for tailoring interventions to changes in local
conditions.
Tags
Landscape connectivity
Animal movement
Disease transmission
fragmented landscapes
Rates
Infectious-diseases
Rabies
Individual-based
model
Population biology
Patch connectivity
Contact rate
Infectious disease management
Raccoon
Dependent disease transmission
Multiscale habitat selection
Chronic
wasting disease
Raccoons procyon-lotor
Tailed prairie dogs
Resource selection
Anthropogenic resources
Tailed prairie
dogs