TY - JOUR
T1 - Disease transmission in territorial populations
T2 - The small-world network of Serengeti lions
AU - Craft, Meggan E.
AU - Volz, Erik
AU - Packer, Craig
AU - Meyers, Lauren Ancel
PY - 2011/6/6
Y1 - 2011/6/6
N2 - Territoriality in animal populations creates spatial structure that is thought to naturally buffer disease invasion. Often, however, territorial populations also include highly mobile, non-residential individuals that potentially serve as disease superspreaders. Using long-term data from the Serengeti Lion Project, we characterize the contact network structure of a territorial wildlife population and address the epidemiological impact of nomadic individuals. As expected, pride contacts are dominated by interactions with neighbouring prides and interspersed by encounters with nomads as they wander throughout the ecosystem. Yet the pride-pride network also includes occasional long-range contacts between prides, making it surprisingly small world and vulnerable to epidemics, even without nomads. While nomads increase both the local and global connectivity of the network, their epidemiological impact is marginal, particularly for diseases with short infectious periods like canine distemper virus. Thus, territoriality in Serengeti lions may be less protective and non-residents less important for disease transmission than previously considered.
AB - Territoriality in animal populations creates spatial structure that is thought to naturally buffer disease invasion. Often, however, territorial populations also include highly mobile, non-residential individuals that potentially serve as disease superspreaders. Using long-term data from the Serengeti Lion Project, we characterize the contact network structure of a territorial wildlife population and address the epidemiological impact of nomadic individuals. As expected, pride contacts are dominated by interactions with neighbouring prides and interspersed by encounters with nomads as they wander throughout the ecosystem. Yet the pride-pride network also includes occasional long-range contacts between prides, making it surprisingly small world and vulnerable to epidemics, even without nomads. While nomads increase both the local and global connectivity of the network, their epidemiological impact is marginal, particularly for diseases with short infectious periods like canine distemper virus. Thus, territoriality in Serengeti lions may be less protective and non-residents less important for disease transmission than previously considered.
KW - African lion
KW - Contact rates
KW - Epidemiological modelling
KW - Network model
KW - Territoriality
KW - Wildlife disease
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U2 - 10.1098/rsif.2010.0511
DO - 10.1098/rsif.2010.0511
M3 - Article
C2 - 21030428
AN - SCOPUS:79955711378
SN - 1742-5689
VL - 8
SP - 776
EP - 786
JO - Journal of the Royal Society Interface
JF - Journal of the Royal Society Interface
IS - 59
ER -