Emerging infectious pathogens are responsible for some of the most severe host mass-mortality events in wild populations. Yet, effective pathogen control strategies are notoriously difficult to identify, in part because quantifying and forecasting pathogen spread and disease dynamics is challenging. Following an outbreak, hosts must cope with the presence of the pathogen, leading to host-pathogen coexistence or extirpation. Despite decades of research, little is known about host-pathogen coexistence post-outbreak when low host abundances and cryptic species make these interactions difficult to study. Using a novel disease-structured N-mixture model, we evaluate empirical support for three host-pathogen coexistence hypotheses (source-sink, e...
While disease-induced extinction is generally considered rare, a number of recently emerging infecti...
A central question in evolutionary biology is how interactions between organisms and the environment...
The 'dilution effect' (DE) hypothesis predicts that diverse host communities will show reduced disea...
Emerging infectious pathogens are responsible for some of the most severe host mass-mortality events...
The evolutionary rescue of host populations may prevent extinction from novel pathogens. However, th...
As the number of fungal pathogen outbreaks become more frequent worldwide across taxa, so have the n...
The fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) has emerged as a major agent of amphibian ex...
The incidence and frequency of emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) of wildlife have increased in the...
Unravelling the multiple interacting drivers of host pathogen co-existence is crucial in understandi...
Wildlife epidemiological outcomes can depend strongly on the composition of an ecological community,...
The emergence of novel pathogens often has dramatic negative effects on previously unexposed host po...
Emerging infectious diseases can cause host community disassembly, but the mechanisms driving the or...
While disease-induced extinction is generally considered rare, a number of recently emerging infecti...
A central question in evolutionary biology is how interactions between organisms and the environment...
The 'dilution effect' (DE) hypothesis predicts that diverse host communities will show reduced disea...
Emerging infectious pathogens are responsible for some of the most severe host mass-mortality events...
The evolutionary rescue of host populations may prevent extinction from novel pathogens. However, th...
As the number of fungal pathogen outbreaks become more frequent worldwide across taxa, so have the n...
The fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) has emerged as a major agent of amphibian ex...
The incidence and frequency of emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) of wildlife have increased in the...
Unravelling the multiple interacting drivers of host pathogen co-existence is crucial in understandi...
Wildlife epidemiological outcomes can depend strongly on the composition of an ecological community,...
The emergence of novel pathogens often has dramatic negative effects on previously unexposed host po...
Emerging infectious diseases can cause host community disassembly, but the mechanisms driving the or...
While disease-induced extinction is generally considered rare, a number of recently emerging infecti...
A central question in evolutionary biology is how interactions between organisms and the environment...
The 'dilution effect' (DE) hypothesis predicts that diverse host communities will show reduced disea...