A big data–model integration approach for predicting epizootics and population recovery in a keystone species

Author:

Barrile Gabriel M.12ORCID,Augustine David J.3ORCID,Porensky Lauren M.3ORCID,Duchardt Courtney J.4ORCID,Shoemaker Kevin T.5ORCID,Hartway Cynthia R.6ORCID,Derner Justin D.7ORCID,Hunter Elizabeth A.8ORCID,Davidson Ana D.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Colorado Natural Heritage Program Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado USA

2. Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado USA

3. USDA‐Agricultural Research Service Fort Collins Colorado USA

4. Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management Oklahoma State University Stillwater Oklahoma USA

5. Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science University of Nevada Reno Nevada USA

6. Wildlife Conservation Society Bronx New York USA

7. USDA‐Agricultural Research Service Cheyenne Wyoming USA

8. U.S. Geological Survey, Virginia Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Conservation Virginia Tech Blacksburg Virginia USA

Abstract

AbstractInfectious diseases pose a significant threat to global health and biodiversity. Yet, predicting the spatiotemporal dynamics of wildlife epizootics remains challenging. Disease outbreaks result from complex nonlinear interactions among a large collection of variables that rarely adhere to the assumptions of parametric regression modeling. We adopted a nonparametric machine learning approach to model wildlife epizootics and population recovery, using the disease system of colonial black‐tailed prairie dogs (BTPD, Cynomys ludovicianus) and sylvatic plague as an example. We synthesized colony data between 2001 and 2020 from eight USDA Forest Service National Grasslands across the range of BTPDs in central North America. We then modeled extinctions due to plague and colony recovery of BTPDs in relation to complex interactions among climate, topoedaphic variables, colony characteristics, and disease history. Extinctions due to plague occurred more frequently when BTPD colonies were spatially clustered, in closer proximity to colonies decimated by plague during the previous year, following cooler than average temperatures the previous summer, and when wetter winter/springs were preceded by drier summers/falls. Rigorous cross‐validations and spatial predictions indicated that our final models predicted plague outbreaks and colony recovery in BTPD with high accuracy (e.g., AUC generally >0.80). Thus, these spatially explicit models can reliably predict the spatial and temporal dynamics of wildlife epizootics and subsequent population recovery in a highly complex host–pathogen system. Our models can be used to support strategic management planning (e.g., plague mitigation) to optimize benefits of this keystone species to associated wildlife communities and ecosystem functioning. This optimization can reduce conflicts among different landowners and resource managers, as well as economic losses to the ranching industry. More broadly, our big data–model integration approach provides a general framework for spatially explicit forecasting of disease‐induced population fluctuations for use in natural resource management decision‐making.

Funder

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology

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