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Fatal attraction: vegetation responses to nutrient inputs attract herbivores to infectious anthrax carcass sites

Parasites can shape the foraging behaviour of their hosts through cues indicating risk of infection. When cues for risk co-occur with desired traits such as forage quality, individuals face a trade-off between nutrient acquisition and parasite exposure. We evaluated how this trade-off may influence...

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Published in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2014-11, Vol.281 (1795), p.20141785-20141785
Main Authors: Turner, Wendy C., Kausrud, Kyrre L., Krishnappa, Yathin S., Cromsigt, Joris P. G. M., Ganz, Holly H., Mapaure, Isaac, Cloete, Claudine C., Havarua, Zepee, Küsters, Martina, Getz, Wayne M., Stenseth, Nils Chr
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Language:English
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Summary:Parasites can shape the foraging behaviour of their hosts through cues indicating risk of infection. When cues for risk co-occur with desired traits such as forage quality, individuals face a trade-off between nutrient acquisition and parasite exposure. We evaluated how this trade-off may influence disease transmission in a 3-year experimental study of anthrax in a guild of mammalian herbivores in Etosha National Park, Namibia. At plains zebra (Equus quagga) carcass sites we assessed (i) carcass nutrient effects on soils and grasses, (ii) concentrations of Bacillus anthracis (BA) on grasses and in soils, and (iii) herbivore grazing behaviour, compared with control sites, using motion-sensing camera traps. We found that carcass-mediated nutrient pulses improved soil and vegetation, and that BA is found on grasses up to 2 years after death. Host foraging responses to carcass sites shifted from avoidance to attraction, and ultimately to no preference, with the strength and duration of these behavioural responses varying among herbivore species. Our results demonstrate that animal carcasses alter the environment and attract grazing hosts to parasite aggregations. This attraction may enhance transmission rates, suggesting that hosts are limited in their ability to trade off nutrient intake with parasite avoidance when relying on indirect cues.
ISSN:0962-8452
1471-2954
1471-2945
1471-2954
DOI:10.1098/rspb.2014.1785