Code for: A metapopulation model of social group dynamics and disease applied to Yellowstone wolves

Abstract The population structure of social species has important consequences for both their demography and transmission of their pathogens. We develop a new form of metapopulation model that tracks two key components of a species' social system: average group size and number of groups within...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brandell, Ellen E.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/4582705
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.sbcc2fr5t
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Summary:Abstract The population structure of social species has important consequences for both their demography and transmission of their pathogens. We develop a new form of metapopulation model that tracks two key components of a species' social system: average group size and number of groups within a population. While the model is general, we parameterize it to mimic the dynamics of the Yellowstone wolf population and two associated pathogens: sarcoptic mange and canine distemper. In the initial absence of disease, we show that group size is mainly determined by the birth, death rates, and the rates at which groups fission to form new groups. The total number of groups is determined by rates of fission and fusion, as well as upon environmental resources and rates of intergroup aggression. Incorporating pathogens into the models reduces the size of the host population, predominantly by reducing the number of social groups. Average group size responds in more subtle ways: infected groups decrease in size, but uninfected groups may increase when disease reduces the number of groups and thereby reduces intraspecific aggression. Our modeling approach allows for easy calculation of prevalence at multiple scales (within group, across groups, and population level), illustrating that aggregate population-level prevalence can be misleading for group-living species. The model structure is general, can be applied to other social species, and allows for a dynamic assessment of how pathogens can affect social structure and vice versa. Significance How do social and infectious disease dynamics interact in group-living mammals? A significant cost to group living is increased transmission of pathogens. When a pathogen invades a group, members will be more vulnerable to mortality, Allee effects, and ultimately group extinction. The presence of a pathogen reduces the size of the population by reducing the number of social groups, allowing uninfected groups to grow larger from a reduction in inter-group aggression. Concomitantly, Allee ...