Abstract

Datasets from which wildlife contact networks of epidemiological importance can be inferred are becoming increasingly common. A largely unexplored facet of these data is finding evidence of spatial constraints on who has contact with whom, despite theoretical epidemiologists having long realized spatial constraints can play a critical role in infectious disease dynamics. A graph dissimilarity measure is proposed to quantify how close an observed contact network is to being purely spatial whereby its edges are completely determined by the spatial arrangement of its nodes. Statistical techniques are also used to fit a series of mechanistic models for contact rates between individuals to the binary edge data representing presence or absence of observed contact. These are the basis for a second measure that quantifies the extent to which contacts are being mediated by distance. We apply these methods to a set of 128 contact networks of field voles (Microtus agrestis) inferred from mark–recapture data collected over 7 years and from four sites. Large fluctuations in vole abundance allow us to demonstrate that the networks become increasingly similar to spatial proximity graphs as vole density increases. The average number of contacts, , was (i) positively correlated with vole density across the range of observed densities and (ii) for two of the four sites a saturating function of density. The implications for pathogen persistence in wildlife may be that persistence is relatively unaffected by fluctuations in host density because at low density is low but hosts move more freely, and at high density is high but transmission is hampered by local build-up of infected or recovered animals.

Highlights

  • There is growing interest among disease ecologists in elaborating contact networks in wildlife populations and the likely consequences for the spread of pathogens or parasites [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]

  • Analyses that quantify spatial constraints on who has contact with whom have largely been absent, even though spatial constraints are capable of critically affecting infectious disease dynamics [10,11]

  • To quantify whether and to what degree spatial constraints play a role in determining the contact rates of voles, we considered the model kij 1⁄4 ceÀlSij, (2:5)

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Summary

Introduction

There is growing interest among disease ecologists in elaborating contact networks in wildlife populations and the likely consequences for the spread of pathogens or parasites [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. Theoretical studies have, in particular, shown that (i) pathogens tend to spread rapidly and on networks containing small numbers of highly connected individuals and (ii) if those highly connected individuals can be targeted for either vaccination or removal it becomes easier to prevent an outbreak or mitigate its effects [9]. We propose two approaches: (i) graph dissimilarity measures that quantify how close an observed network is to being a proximity graph

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