Data from: Cascading effects of predator activity on tick-borne disease risk
Predators and competitors of vertebrates can in theory reduce the density of infected nymphs (DIN)—an often-used measure of tick-borne disease risk—by lowering the density of reservoir-competent hosts and/or the tick burden on reservoir-competent hosts. We investigated this possible indirect effect...
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Zusammenfassung: | Predators and competitors of vertebrates can in theory reduce the density
of infected nymphs (DIN)—an often-used measure of tick-borne disease
risk—by lowering the density of reservoir-competent hosts and/or the tick
burden on reservoir-competent hosts. We investigated this possible
indirect effect of predators by comparing data from 20 forest plots across
the Netherlands that varied in predator abundance. In each plot, we
measured the density of questing Ixodes ricinus nymphs (DON), DIN for
three pathogens, rodent density, the tick burden on rodents and the
activity of mammalian predators. We analysed whether rodent density and
tick burden on rodents were correlated with predator activity, and how
rodent density and tick burden predicted DON and DIN for the three
pathogens. We found that larval burden on two rodent species decreased
with activity of two predator species, while DON and DIN for all three
pathogens increased with larval burden on rodents, as predicted. Path
analyses supported an indirect negative correlation of activity of both
predator species with DON and DIN. Our results suggest that predators can
indeed lower the number of ticks feeding on reservoir-competent hosts,
which implies that changes in predator abundance may have cascading
effects on tick-borne disease risk. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.th1s6 |