AI Article Synopsis

  • * Using data from the National Ecological Observatory Network, the study focused on white-footed mice and found that individual factors such as sex, body mass, and reproductive status affected tick parasitism, with varying effects depending on the tick life stage.
  • * The research revealed that mouse movement behavior correlated with tick carrying rates, indicating that variations in host mobility could influence host-parasite encounters and potentially modify zoonotic disease risk due to changes in the environment and human activities.

Article Abstract

Identifying the factors that affect host-parasite interactions is essential for understanding the ecology and dynamics of vector-borne diseases and may be an important component of predicting human disease risk. Characteristics of hosts themselves (e.g., body condition, host behavior, immune defenses) may affect the likelihood of parasitism. However, despite highly variable rates of parasitism and infection in wild populations, identifying widespread links between individual characteristics and heterogeneity in parasite acquisition has proven challenging because many zoonoses exist over wide geographic extents and exhibit both spatial and temporal heterogeneity in prevalence and individual and population-level effects. Using seven years of data collected by the National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON), we examined relationships among individual host condition, behavior, and parasitism by Ixodid ticks in a keystone host species, the white-footed mouse, Peromyscus leucopus. We found that individual condition, specifically sex, body mass, and reproductive condition, had both direct and indirect effects on parasitism by ticks, but the nature of these effects differed for parasitism by larval versus nymphal ticks. We also found that condition differences influenced rodent behavior, and behavior directly affected the rates of parasitism, with individual mice that moved farther being more likely to carry ticks. This study illustrates how individual-level data can be examined using large-scale datasets to draw inference and uncover broad patterns in host-parasite encounters at unprecedented spatial scales. Our results suggest that intraspecific variation in the movement ecology of hosts may affect host-parasite encounter rates and, ultimately, alter zoonotic disease risk through anthropogenic modifications and natural environmental conditions that alter host space use.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.4478DOI Listing

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