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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The interaction of parasites and resources cause crashes in a wild mouse population.

TLDR
This study is one of the few to demonstrate that the interaction between resource availability and infectious disease is important for shaping host population dynamics and emphasizes that multiple factors may drive oscillations in wild animal populations.
Abstract
1. Populations of white-footed mice Peromyscus leucopus and deer mice Peromyscus maniculatus increase dramatically in response to food availability from oak acorn masts. These populations subsequently decline following this resource pulse, but these crashes cannot be explained solely by resource depletion, as food resources are still available as population crashes begin. 2. We hypothesized that intestinal parasites contribute to these post-mast crashes; Peromyscus are infected by many intestinal parasites that are often transmitted by density-dependent contact and can cause harm to their hosts. To test our hypothesis, we conducted a factorial experiment in natural populations by supplementing food to mimic a mast and by removal of intestinal nematodes with the drug, ivermectin. 3. Both food supplementation and the removal of intestinal nematodes lessened the rate and magnitude of the seasonal population declines as compared with control populations. However, the combination of food supplementation and removal of intestinal nematodes prevented seasonal population crashes entirely. 4. We also showed a direct effect on the condition of individuals. Faecal corticosterone levels, an indicator of the stress response, were significantly reduced in populations receiving both food supplementation and removal of intestinal nematodes. This effect was observed in autumn, before the overwinter crash observed in control populations, which may indicate that stress caused by the combination of food limitation and parasite infection is a physiological signal that predicts low winter survival and reproduction. 5. This study is one of the few to demonstrate that the interaction between resource availability and infectious disease is important for shaping host population dynamics and emphasizes that multiple factors may drive oscillations in wild animal populations.

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Citations
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Do baseline glucocorticoids predict fitness

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Wildlife diseases: from individuals to ecosystems

TL;DR: The authors' ecological understanding of wildlife infectious diseases from the individual host to the ecosystem scale is reviewed, highlighting where conceptual thinking lacks verification, discussing difficulties and challenges, and offering potential future research directions.
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Why infectious disease research needs community ecology.

TL;DR: This work describes how analytical and conceptual approaches from this discipline can be used to address fundamental challenges in disease research, and shows how a community ecology framework can help to determine whether infection is best controlled through ‘defensive’ approaches that reduce host suitability or through “offensive” approaches that dampen parasite spread.
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Disease spread, susceptibility and infection intensity: vicious circles?

TL;DR: It is argued that this potential synergy between host susceptibility and infection should be more widely acknowledged in disease ecology research.
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A Meta-Analysis Of Resource Pulse-Consumer Interactions

TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis of resource pulse-consumer interactions is presented to identify general patterns among the diversity of pulsed resource phenomena in nature, and the authors consider the mechanistic processes behind these patterns and their implications for the ecology of resource pulses.
References
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Book

Infectious Diseases of Humans: Dynamics and Control

TL;DR: This book discusses the biology of host-microparasite associations, dynamics of acquired immunity heterogeneity within the human community indirectly transmitted helminths, and the ecology and genetics of hosts and parasites.
Journal ArticleDOI

How do glucocorticoids influence stress responses? Integrating permissive, suppressive, stimulatory, and preparative actions.

TL;DR: This review considers recent findings regarding GC action and generates criteria for determining whether a particular GC action permits, stimulates, or suppresses an ongoing stress-response or, as an additional category, is preparative for a subsequent stressor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population biology of infectious diseases: Part II

TL;DR: Consideration is given to the relation between the ecology and evolution of the transmission processes and the overall dynamics, and to the mechanisms that can produce cyclic patterns, or multiple stable states, in the levels of infection in the host population.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the prevalence and relative importance of interspecific competition: evidence from field experiments

TL;DR: The present survey illustrates how difficult it is to produce a clear and unambiguous demonstration of interspecific competition.
BookDOI

Population biology of infectious diseases.

TL;DR: When you read more every page of this population biology of infectious diseases, what you will obtain is something great.
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