| Literature DB >> 31251646 |
Eleanor Tanner, Andy White, Peter W W Lurz, Christian Gortázar, Iratxe Díez-Delgado, Mike Boots.
Abstract
Despite the ubiquity of disease in nature, the role that disease dynamics play in the compensatory growth response to harvesting has been ignored. We use a mathematical approach to show that harvesting can lead to compensatory growth due to a release from disease-induced mortality. Our findings imply that culling in systems that harbor virulent parasites can reduce disease prevalence and increase population density. Our models predict that this compensation occurs for a broad range of infectious disease characteristics unless the disease induces long-lasting immunity in hosts. Our key insight is that a population can be regulated at a similar density by disease or at reduced prevalence by a combination of culling and disease. We illustrate our predictions with a system-specific model representing wild boar tuberculosis infection, parameterized for central Spain, and find significant compensation to culling. Given that few wildlife diseases are likely to induce long-lived immunity, populations with virulent diseases may often be resilient to harvesting.Entities:
Keywords: compensatory growth; culling; disease dynamics; hydra effect; immunity; virulence
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31251646 DOI: 10.1086/703437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am Nat ISSN: 0003-0147 Impact factor: 3.926