Season of death, pathogen persistence and wildlife behaviour alter number of anthrax secondary infections from environmental reservoirs

Author:

Dolfi Amélie C.1ORCID,Kausrud Kyrre2ORCID,Rysava Kristyna1ORCID,Champagne Celeste3,Huang Yen-Hua45ORCID,Barandongo Zoe R.1ORCID,Turner Wendy C.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Wisconsin Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA

2. Norwegian Veterinary Institute, Ås, Norway

3. College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN 55108, USA

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511, USA

5. Institute for Biospheric Studies, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511, USA

6. US Geological Survey, Wisconsin Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA

Abstract

An important part of infectious disease management is predicting factors that influence disease outbreaks, such as R , the number of secondary infections arising from an infected individual. Estimating R is particularly challenging for environmentally transmitted pathogens given time lags between cases and subsequent infections. Here, we calculated R for Bacillus anthracis infections arising from anthrax carcass sites in Etosha National Park, Namibia. Combining host behavioural data, pathogen concentrations and simulation models, we show that R is spatially and temporally variable, driven by spore concentrations at death, host visitation rates and early preference for foraging at infectious sites. While spores were detected up to a decade after death, most secondary infections occurred within 2 years. Transmission simulations under scenarios combining site infectiousness and host exposure risk under different environmental conditions led to dramatically different outbreak dynamics, from pathogen extinction ( R < 1) to explosive outbreaks ( R > 10). These transmission heterogeneities may explain variation in anthrax outbreak dynamics observed globally, and more generally, the critical importance of environmental variation underlying host–pathogen interactions. Notably, our approach allowed us to estimate the lethal dose of a highly virulent pathogen non-invasively from observational studies and epidemiological data, useful when experiments on wildlife are undesirable or impractical.

Funder

NSF-NIH-USDA

NSF

Publisher

The Royal Society

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