Abstract

Many parasites infect multiple hosts, but estimating the transmission across host species remains a key challenge in disease ecology. We investigated the within and across host species dynamics of canine distemper virus (CDV) in grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) and wolves (Canis lupus) of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE). We hypothesized that grizzly bears may be more likely to be exposed to CDV during outbreaks in the wolf population because grizzly bears often displace wolves while scavenging carcasses. We used serological data collected from 1984 to 2014 in conjunction with Bayesian state‐space models to infer the temporal dynamics of CDV. These models accounted for the unknown timing of pathogen exposure, and we assessed how different testing thresholds and the potential for testing errors affected our conclusions. We identified three main CDV outbreaks (1999, 2005, and 2008) in wolves, which were more obvious when we used higher diagnostic thresholds to qualify as seropositive. There was some evidence for increased exposure rates in grizzly bears in 2005, but the magnitude of the wolf effect on bear exposures was poorly estimated and depended upon our prior distributions. Grizzly bears were exposed to CDV prior to wolf reintroduction and during time periods outside of known wolf outbreaks, thus wolves are only one of several potential routes for grizzly bear exposures. Our modeling approach accounts for several of the shortcomings of serological data and is applicable to many wildlife disease systems, but is most informative when testing intervals are short. CDV circulates in a wide range of carnivore species, but it remains unclear whether the disease persists locally within the GYE carnivore community or is periodically reintroduced from distant regions with larger host populations.

Highlights

  • Estimating disease transmission across host species remains a key challenge in disease ecology and has important implications for identifying host species or populations that act as reservoirs and optimal control efforts (Haydon, Cleaveland, Taylor, & Laurenson, 2002; Viana et al, 2014)

  • Our analyses indicated that there were 3–4 canine distemper virus (CDV) outbreaks in wolves in Yellowstone National Park from 1995 to 2014, followed by several years of recovery

  • We expected grizzly bears to be at higher risk of CDV during years when a high proportion of wolves were exposed to CDV because grizzly bears often displace wolves from feeding on carcasses, which is a likely means of transmission between species

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Estimating disease transmission across host species remains a key challenge in disease ecology and has important implications for identifying host species or populations that act as reservoirs and optimal control efforts (Haydon, Cleaveland, Taylor, & Laurenson, 2002; Viana et al, 2014). Three purported CDV outbreaks have occurred in the gray wolf (Canis lupus) population of Yellowstone National Park (YNP) since their reintroduction in 1995; all three coincided with significant pup mortality (Almberg, Mech, Smith, Sheldon, & Crabtree, 2009; Almberg et al, 2010; Stahler, Macnulty, Wayne, Vonholdt, & Smith, 2013) During these outbreaks, coyotes (Canis latrans) and cougars (Puma concolor) were exposed to CDV (Almberg et al, 2009); comparable information is lacking for bear populations of the GYE. Canine distemper virus is transmitted by close contact via aerosols, oral, respiratory, or ocular fluids, but morbilliviruses do not survive long outside the host Both direct and environmental transmission across carnivore species may be rare because they may not interact frequently.

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
ETHICAL STATEMENT
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