Data from: Is there a disease-free halo at species range limits? The co-distribution of anther-smut disease and its host species
1. While disease is widely recognized as affecting host population size, it has rarely been considered to play a role in determining host range limits. Many diseases may not be able to persist near the range limit if host population density falls below the critical threshold level for pathogen invas...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. While disease is widely recognized as affecting host population size,
it has rarely been considered to play a role in determining host range
limits. Many diseases may not be able to persist near the range limit if
host population density falls below the critical threshold level for
pathogen invasion. However, in vector- and sexually-transmitted diseases,
pathogen transmission may be largely independent of host density and
theory demonstrates that diseases with frequency-dependent transmission
may persist in small populations near the range limit. 2. Empirical
studies of disease at species range limits have lagged behind the theory,
and to date, no previous study has tested the hypothesis that vector or
sexually transmitted diseases can be maintained at host range limits. 3.
We studied the distribution of anther-smut disease, a sterilizing
pollinator-transmitted disease, on four alpine plant species to determine
whether disease was present at the host range limits. 4. We found that
host abundance declined towards the elevational range limits, and disease
extended to the most extreme elevational range limits in three of the four
host species. Maximum likelihood estimation of the magnitude of the
disease-free halo showed that it was small or non-existent for all host
species. Moreover, disease prevalence within populations was often higher
nearer the host’s range limit than in the range center and was independent
of host density. 5. Synthesis: Our results show that diseases where
transmission is frequency-dependent have the potential to affect host
distributions not just in theory, but also in real world populations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.60cq733 |