Abstract

Host density thresholds to pathogen invasion separate regions of parameter space corresponding to endemic and disease-free states. The host density threshold is a central concept in theoretical epidemiology and a common target of human and wildlife disease control programmes, but there is mixed evidence supporting the existence of thresholds, especially in wildlife populations or for pathogens with complex transmission modes (e.g. environmental transmission). Here, we demonstrate the existence of a host density threshold for an environmentally transmitted pathogen by combining an epidemiological model with a microcosm experiment. Experimental epidemics consisted of replicate populations of naive crustacean zooplankton (Daphnia dentifera) hosts across a range of host densities (20–640 hosts l−1) that were exposed to an environmentally transmitted fungal pathogen (Metschnikowia bicuspidata). Epidemiological model simulations, parametrized independently of the experiment, qualitatively predicted experimental pathogen invasion thresholds. Variability in parameter estimates did not strongly influence outcomes, though systematic changes to key parameters have the potential to shift pathogen invasion thresholds. In summary, we provide one of the first clear experimental demonstrations of pathogen invasion thresholds in a replicated experimental system, and provide evidence that such thresholds may be predictable using independently constructed epidemiological models.

Highlights

  • Central to the study of infectious disease dynamics is the concept of a critical threshold to pathogen invasion as a function of host density, below which2018 The Authors

  • We examined a model host–pathogen system consisting of a freshwater cladoceran (Daphnia dentifera) parasitized by an environmentally transmitted fungal pathogen (Metschnikowia bicuspidata)

  • Pathogen invasion thresholds—defined either as R0 > 1 or as the probability of observing one infected individual following pathogen exposure—predicted by model simulations were qualitatively similar to the observed pathogen invasion probability from experimental epidemics

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A pathogen is unable to invade a host population [1,2]. This critical threshold is a commonly sought 2 target for horticultural [1], wildlife [3] and human [4] disease control. Apart from the influence of fluctuating environmental conditions, pathogen invasion thresholds may be difficult to measure in field populations as a result of data scarcity, lack of replicated experimentation and the effects of host ecology (e.g. behaviour, social structure) [9]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call