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Water sources aggregate parasites with increasing effects in more arid conditions
by
Rodriguez, Ivan
, Hulke, Jenna
, Branch, Douglas
, Titcomb, Georgia
, Young, Hillary
, Mantas, John Naisikie
in
631/158/1469
/ 631/158/2165
/ 631/158/853
/ 631/158/856
/ Animal diseases
/ Animals
/ Aridity
/ Cattle - parasitology
/ Disease hot spots
/ Disease transmission
/ Elephants
/ Elephants - parasitology
/ Feces
/ Feces - parasitology
/ Herbivores
/ Herbivory
/ Heterogeneity
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Humans
/ Kenya
/ Land use
/ Landscape
/ multidisciplinary
/ Parasites
/ Parasites - isolation & purification
/ Parasitic Diseases - parasitology
/ Parasitic Diseases - transmission
/ Rainfall
/ Savannahs
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Water - parasitology
/ Water Resources
/ Wildlife conservation
2021
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Water sources aggregate parasites with increasing effects in more arid conditions
by
Rodriguez, Ivan
, Hulke, Jenna
, Branch, Douglas
, Titcomb, Georgia
, Young, Hillary
, Mantas, John Naisikie
in
631/158/1469
/ 631/158/2165
/ 631/158/853
/ 631/158/856
/ Animal diseases
/ Animals
/ Aridity
/ Cattle - parasitology
/ Disease hot spots
/ Disease transmission
/ Elephants
/ Elephants - parasitology
/ Feces
/ Feces - parasitology
/ Herbivores
/ Herbivory
/ Heterogeneity
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Humans
/ Kenya
/ Land use
/ Landscape
/ multidisciplinary
/ Parasites
/ Parasites - isolation & purification
/ Parasitic Diseases - parasitology
/ Parasitic Diseases - transmission
/ Rainfall
/ Savannahs
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Water - parasitology
/ Water Resources
/ Wildlife conservation
2021
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Water sources aggregate parasites with increasing effects in more arid conditions
by
Rodriguez, Ivan
, Hulke, Jenna
, Branch, Douglas
, Titcomb, Georgia
, Young, Hillary
, Mantas, John Naisikie
in
631/158/1469
/ 631/158/2165
/ 631/158/853
/ 631/158/856
/ Animal diseases
/ Animals
/ Aridity
/ Cattle - parasitology
/ Disease hot spots
/ Disease transmission
/ Elephants
/ Elephants - parasitology
/ Feces
/ Feces - parasitology
/ Herbivores
/ Herbivory
/ Heterogeneity
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Humans
/ Kenya
/ Land use
/ Landscape
/ multidisciplinary
/ Parasites
/ Parasites - isolation & purification
/ Parasitic Diseases - parasitology
/ Parasitic Diseases - transmission
/ Rainfall
/ Savannahs
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Water - parasitology
/ Water Resources
/ Wildlife conservation
2021
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Water sources aggregate parasites with increasing effects in more arid conditions
Journal Article
Water sources aggregate parasites with increasing effects in more arid conditions
2021
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Overview
Shifts in landscape heterogeneity and climate can influence animal movement in ways that profoundly alter disease transmission. Water sources that are foci of animal activity have great potential to promote disease transmission, but it is unknown how this varies across a range of hosts and climatic contexts. For fecal-oral parasites, water resources can aggregate many different hosts in small areas, concentrate infectious material, and function as disease hotspots. This may be exacerbated where water is scarce and for species requiring frequent water access. Working in an East African savanna, we show via experimental and observational methods that water sources increase the density of wild and domestic herbivore feces and thus, the concentration of fecal-oral parasites in the environment, by up to two orders of magnitude. We show that this effect is amplified in drier areas and drier periods, creating dynamic and heterogeneous disease landscapes across space and time. We also show that herbivore grazing behaviors that expose them to fecal-oral parasites often increase at water sources relative to background sites, increasing potential parasite transmission at these hotspots. Critically, this effect varies by herbivore species, with strongest effects for two animals of concern for conservation and development: elephants and cattle.
Amid climate and land use changes, it is important to identify and monitor hotspots of animal activity where disease transmission can occur. Using experimental and observational methods in an East African savannah, this study shows water sources increase the concentration of faecal-oral parasites in the environment and that this effect is amplified in drier areas and following periods of low rainfall.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group,Nature Portfolio
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