Abstract Increasing prevalence of wildlife disease accentuates the need to uncover drivers of epidemics. Predators can directly influence disease prevalence via density-mediated effects (e.g., culling infected hosts lead-ing to reduced disease prevalence). However, trait-medi-ated indirect effects (TMIEs) of predators can also strongly influence disease—but predicting a priori whether TMIEs should increase or decrease disease prevalence can be challenging, especially since a single predator may elicit responses that have opposing effects on disease prevalence. Here, we pair laboratory experiments with a mechanistic, size-based model of TMIEs in a zooplankton host, fungal parasite, multiple predator system. Kairomones can either increase or ...
The relatively new field of eco-epidemiology investigates how diseases spread in relation to fundame...
In nature, hosts are exposed to a multitude of diseases and a wide range of food qualities and quant...
International audienceDespite growing interest in ecological consequences of parasitism in food webs...
1. Predators could reduce disease prevalence in prey populations by culling infected hosts and reduc...
Predators directly interact with their prey. These direct interactions can indirectly alter the int...
Community ecology can link habitat to disease via interactions among habitat, focal hosts, other hos...
International audienceOutbreaks of generalist pathogens are influenced by host community structure, ...
Predation and parasitism are each important ecological processes within communities and ecosystems. ...
Community ecology can link habitat to disease via interactions among habitat, focal hosts, other hos...
Anthropogenic resource supplementation can shape wildlife disease directly by altering the traits an...
Predators and parasites are critical, interconnected members of the community and have the potent...
Non-random species associations occur in naturally sampled parasite communities. The processes resul...
1.The size of disease epidemics remains difficult to predict, especially when parasites interact wit...
Parasite prevalence shows tremendous spatiotemporal variation. Theory indicates this variation might...
9 pagesInternational audienceMany trophically-transmitted parasites induce behavioural alteration in...
The relatively new field of eco-epidemiology investigates how diseases spread in relation to fundame...
In nature, hosts are exposed to a multitude of diseases and a wide range of food qualities and quant...
International audienceDespite growing interest in ecological consequences of parasitism in food webs...
1. Predators could reduce disease prevalence in prey populations by culling infected hosts and reduc...
Predators directly interact with their prey. These direct interactions can indirectly alter the int...
Community ecology can link habitat to disease via interactions among habitat, focal hosts, other hos...
International audienceOutbreaks of generalist pathogens are influenced by host community structure, ...
Predation and parasitism are each important ecological processes within communities and ecosystems. ...
Community ecology can link habitat to disease via interactions among habitat, focal hosts, other hos...
Anthropogenic resource supplementation can shape wildlife disease directly by altering the traits an...
Predators and parasites are critical, interconnected members of the community and have the potent...
Non-random species associations occur in naturally sampled parasite communities. The processes resul...
1.The size of disease epidemics remains difficult to predict, especially when parasites interact wit...
Parasite prevalence shows tremendous spatiotemporal variation. Theory indicates this variation might...
9 pagesInternational audienceMany trophically-transmitted parasites induce behavioural alteration in...
The relatively new field of eco-epidemiology investigates how diseases spread in relation to fundame...
In nature, hosts are exposed to a multitude of diseases and a wide range of food qualities and quant...
International audienceDespite growing interest in ecological consequences of parasitism in food webs...