Dynamic, spatial models of parasite transmission in wildlife: Their structure, applications and remaining challenges
Authored by Lauren A White, James D Forester, Meggan E Craft
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.12761
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Abstract
1. Individual differences in contact rate can arise from host, group and
landscape heterogeneity and can result in different patterns of spatial
spread for diseases in wildlife populations with concomitant
implications for disease control in wildlife of conservation concern,
livestock and humans. While dynamic disease models can provide a better
understanding of the drivers of spatial spread, the effects of landscape
heterogeneity have only been modelled in a few well-studied wildlife
systems such as rabies and bovine tuberculosis. Such spatial models tend
to be either purely theoretical with intrinsic limiting assumptions or
individual-based models that are often highly species- and
system-specific, limiting the breadth of their utility.
2. Our goal was to review studies that have utilized dynamic, spatial
models to answer questions about pathogen transmission in wildlife and
identify key gaps in the literature. We begin by providing an overview
of the main types of dynamic, spatial models (e.g., metapopulation,
network, lattice, cellular automata, individual-based and
continuous-space) and their relation to each other. We investigate
different types of ecological questions that these models have been used
to explore: pathogen invasion dynamics and range expansion, spatial
heterogeneity and pathogen persistence, the implications of management
and intervention strategies and the role of evolution in host-pathogen
dynamics.
3. We reviewed 168 studies that consider pathogen transmission in
free-ranging wildlife and classify them by the model type employed, the
focal host-pathogen system, and their overall research themes and
motivation. We observed a significant focus on mammalian hosts, a few
well-studied or purely theoretical pathogen systems, and a lack of
studies occurring at the wildlife-public health or wildlife-livestock
interfaces.
4. Finally, we discuss challenges and future directions in the context
of unprecedented human-mediated environmental change. Spatial models may
provide new insights into understanding, for example, how global warming
and habitat disturbance contribute to disease maintenance and emergence.
Moving forward, better integration of dynamic, spatial disease models
with approaches from movement ecology, landscape genetics/genomics and
ecoimmunology may provide new avenues for investigation and aid in the
control of zoonotic and emerging infectious diseases.
Tags
Spatial heterogeneity
Spatial Models
transmission
Wildlife
Landscape heterogeneity
Pathogen transmission
Pathogen
Infectious-disease
Individual-based
model
White-tailed deer
State-space models
Yellowstone-national-park
Metapopulation models
Stochastic simulation-model
Badger meles-meles
Emerging infectious-diseases
Guppies poecilia-reticulata
Parasite
Dynamic disease models
Social network structure
Bovine-tuberculosis
Local
persistence