Stephen P. Ellner, Wee Hao Ng, nd Christopher R. Myers. 2020
martes, 14 de abril de 2020
Individual Specialization and Multihost Epidemics: Disease Spread in Plant-Pollinator Networks
Stephen P. Ellner, Wee Hao Ng, nd Christopher R. Myers. 2020
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Stephen P. Ellner, Wee Hao Ng, nd Christopher R. Myers. 2020
Many parasites infect multiple species and persist through a combination
 of within- and between-species transmission. Multispecies transmission 
networks are typically constructed at the species level, linking two 
species if any individuals of those species interact. However, 
generalist species often consist of specialized individuals that prefer 
different subsets of available resources, so individual- and 
species-level contact networks can differ systematically. To explore the
 epidemiological impacts of host specialization, we build and study a 
model for pollinator pathogens on plant-pollinator networks, in which 
individual pollinators have dynamic preferences for different flower 
species. We find that modeling and analysis that ignore individual host 
specialization can predict die-off of a disease that is actually 
strongly persistent and can badly over- or underpredict steady-state 
disease prevalence. Effects of individual preferences remain substantial
 whenever mean preference duration exceeds half of the mean time from 
infection to recovery or death. Similar results hold in a model where 
hosts foraging in different habitats have different frequencies of 
contact with an environmental reservoir for the pathogen. Thus, even if 
all hosts have the same long-run average behavior, dynamic individual 
differences can profoundly affect disease persistence and prevalence.
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