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Considering humans as habitat reveals evidence of successional disease ecology among human pathogens
by
Price, Charles A.
, Stringham, Oliver C.
, Fefferman, Nina H.
in
Biology and Life Sciences
/ Chronology
/ Community ecology
/ Diseases
/ Dynamics
/ Ecological effects
/ Ecological succession
/ Ecology
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Environmental aspects
/ Epidemics
/ Epidemiology
/ Host-parasite relationships
/ Immune system
/ Immunological memory
/ Infections
/ Infectious diseases
/ Life history
/ Medical research
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Microbiomes
/ Parasites
/ Pathogenic microorganisms
/ Pathogens
/ Population
/ Short Reports
/ United States
2022
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Considering humans as habitat reveals evidence of successional disease ecology among human pathogens
by
Price, Charles A.
, Stringham, Oliver C.
, Fefferman, Nina H.
in
Biology and Life Sciences
/ Chronology
/ Community ecology
/ Diseases
/ Dynamics
/ Ecological effects
/ Ecological succession
/ Ecology
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Environmental aspects
/ Epidemics
/ Epidemiology
/ Host-parasite relationships
/ Immune system
/ Immunological memory
/ Infections
/ Infectious diseases
/ Life history
/ Medical research
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Microbiomes
/ Parasites
/ Pathogenic microorganisms
/ Pathogens
/ Population
/ Short Reports
/ United States
2022
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Do you wish to request the book?
Considering humans as habitat reveals evidence of successional disease ecology among human pathogens
by
Price, Charles A.
, Stringham, Oliver C.
, Fefferman, Nina H.
in
Biology and Life Sciences
/ Chronology
/ Community ecology
/ Diseases
/ Dynamics
/ Ecological effects
/ Ecological succession
/ Ecology
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Environmental aspects
/ Epidemics
/ Epidemiology
/ Host-parasite relationships
/ Immune system
/ Immunological memory
/ Infections
/ Infectious diseases
/ Life history
/ Medical research
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Microbiomes
/ Parasites
/ Pathogenic microorganisms
/ Pathogens
/ Population
/ Short Reports
/ United States
2022
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Considering humans as habitat reveals evidence of successional disease ecology among human pathogens
Journal Article
Considering humans as habitat reveals evidence of successional disease ecology among human pathogens
2022
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Overview
The realization that ecological principles play an important role in infectious disease dynamics has led to a renaissance in epidemiological theory. Ideas from ecological succession theory have begun to inform an understanding of the relationship between the individual microbiome and health but have not yet been applied to investigate broader, population-level epidemiological dynamics. We consider human hosts as habitat and apply ideas from succession to immune memory and multi-pathogen dynamics in populations. We demonstrate that ecologically meaningful life history characteristics of pathogens and parasites, rather than epidemiological features alone, are likely to play a meaningful role in determining the age at which people have the greatest probability of being infected. Our results indicate the potential importance of microbiome succession in determining disease incidence and highlight the need to explore how pathogen life history traits and host ecology influence successional dynamics. We conclude by exploring some of the implications that inclusion of successional theory might have for understanding the ecology of diseases and their hosts.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
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