Examination of the interaction between age-specific predation and chronic disease in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Item Metadata
Dublin Core
Title
Examination of the interaction between age-specific predation and chronic disease in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Description
Abstract
- Predators may create healthier prey populations by selectively removing diseased individuals. Predators typically prefer some ages of prey over others, which may, or may not, align with those prey ages that are most likely to be diseased.
- The interaction of age-specific infection and predation has not been previously explored and likely has sizable effects on disease dynamics. We hypothesize that predator cleansing effects will be greater when the disease and predation occur in the same prey age groups.
- We examine the predator cleansing effect using a model where both vulnerability to predators and pathogen prevalence vary with age. We tailor this model to chronic wasting disease (CWD) in mule deer and elk populations in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, with empirical data from Yellowstone grey wolves and cougars.
- Model results suggest that under moderate, yet realistic, predation pressure from cougars and wolves independently, predators may decrease CWD outbreak size substantially and delay the accumulation of symptomatic deer and elk. The magnitude of this effect is driven by the ability of predators to selectively remove late-stage CWD infections that are likely the most responsible for transmission, but this may not be the age class they typically select. Thus, predators that select for infected young adults over uninfected juveniles have a stronger cleansing effect, and these effects are strengthened when transmission rates increase with increasing prey morbidity. There are also trade-offs from a management perspective—that is, increasing predator kill rates can result in opposing forces on prey abundance and CWD prevalence.
- Our modelling exploration shows that predators have the potential to reduce prevalence in prey populations when prey age and disease severity are considered, yet the strength of this effect is influenced by predators' selection for demography or body condition. Current CWD management focuses on increasing cervid hunting as the primary management tool, and our results suggest predators may also be a useful tool under certain conditions, but not necessarily without additional impacts on host abundance and demography. Protected areas with predator populations will play a large role in informing the debate over predator impacts on disease
Bibliographic Citation
Brandell, E.E., P. C. Cross, D. W. Smith, W. Rogers, N. L. Galloway, D. MacNulty, D. R. Stahler, J. Treanor, and P. J. Hudson. 2022. Examination of the interaction between age‐specific predation and chronic disease in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Journal of Animal Ecology. 91:1373-1384, https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13661
Creator
Brandell, Ellen E.
Cross, Paul C.
Smith, Douglas W.
Rogers, Will
Galloway, Nathan L.
MacNulty, Daniel R.
Stahler, Daniel R.
Treanor, John
Hudson, Peter J.
Subject
Demography
Healthy herds
Infectious disease
Matrix model
Prion
Extent
12 pages
Format
application/pdf
Language
English
Is Part Of
Journal of Animal Ecology
Date Accepted
2021/12/28
Date Issued
2022/01/07
Date Submitted
2021/08/18
Collection
Citation
Brandell, Ellen E. et al., “Examination of the interaction between age-specific predation and chronic disease in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem,” CPW Digital Collections, accessed October 7, 2024, https://cpw.cvlcollections.org/items/show/388.