Resource selection by New York City deer reveals the effective interface between wildlife, zoonotic hazards and humans

Author:

VanAcker Meredith C.12ORCID,DeNicola Vickie L.3ORCID,DeNicola Anthony J.3,Aucoin Sarah Grimké4,Simon Richard4,Toal Katrina L.4,Diuk‐Wasser Maria A.1,Cagnacci Francesca56

Affiliation:

1. Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology Columbia University New York New York USA

2. Global Health Program, Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute District of Columbia Washington USA

3. White Buffalo, Inc. Connecticut Moodus USA

4. City of New York Parks & Recreation New York New York USA

5. Research and Innovation Centre Fondazione Edmund Mach San Michele all'Adige Italy

6. National Biodiversity Future Centre Palermo Italy

Abstract

AbstractAlthough the role of host movement in shaping infectious disease dynamics is widely acknowledged, methodological separation between animal movement and disease ecology has prevented researchers from leveraging empirical insights from movement data to advance landscape scale understanding of infectious disease risk. To address this knowledge gap, we examine how movement behaviour and resource utilization by white‐tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) determines blacklegged tick (Ixodes scapularis) distribution, which depend on deer for dispersal in a highly fragmented New York City borough. Multi‐scale hierarchical resource selection analysis and movement modelling provide insight into how deer's movements contribute to the risk landscape for human exposure to the Lyme disease vector–I. scapularis. We find deer select highly vegetated and accessible residential properties which support blacklegged tick survival. We conclude the distribution of tick‐borne disease risk results from the individual resource selection by deer across spatial scales in response to habitat fragmentation and anthropogenic disturbances.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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