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What is infectious disease?
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Ecology of Infectious Disease & Disease in plant communities Dr. Charles Mitchell UNC Biology Department & Curriculum in Ecology
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Lecture outline Basic concepts / definitions Patterns of disease emergence Transmission Disease triangle Virus dynamics in grass communities
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What is infectious disease?
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Negative effects on a host organism caused by a parasite / pathogen
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What is infectious disease? Negative effects on a host organism caused by a parasite / pathogen Examples AIDS Malaria Measles Influenza (the flu) Anthrax Tapeworm infection SARS Non-examples Asthma Cancer (?) Heart attacks (?)
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What is infectious disease? Negative effects on a host organism caused by a parasite / pathogen What is a parasite / pathogen? An organism that exploits a single host individual per life-history stage, causing disease
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What is infectious disease? Negative effects on a host organism caused by a parasite / pathogen What is a parasite / pathogen? An organism that exploits a single host individual per life-history stage, causing disease Examples HIV -> AIDS Plasmodium spp. -> malaria Taenia spp. -> tapeworm infection
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Parasites = 1/3 of Biodiversity de Meeus and Renaud 2002
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Insect parasitoids
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What is infectious disease? Negative effects on a host organism caused by a parasite / pathogen What is a parasite / pathogen? An organism that exploits a single host individual per life-history stage, causing disease What is infection? The process by which a parasite exploits its host, signified by its presence in the host
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Lecture outline Basic concepts / definitions Patterns of disease emergence Transmission Disease triangle Virus dynamics in grass communities
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Disease and society: history Biblical human and crop “plagues” Plague of Athens -> end of Golden Age Smallpox and measles -> Euro colonization Irish potato famine -> migration to U.S. Early 1900’s: vaccines and antibiotics 1967: “The war against infectious diseases has been won” – U.S. Surgeon General 1980 - present: rise of emerging diseases
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What is an emerging disease? Newly discovered globally, or Spreading into new host populations, or Increasing within historical host population (“re-emerging”)
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Human pathogens 175 emerging / 1415 total species Greater risk of emergence: –Viruses and protozoans –Multiple-host pathogens Similar patterns for domestic animals
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Examples of emerging infectious diseases of humans Morens et al. 2004
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Causes of plant pathogen emergence
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Lecture outline Basic concepts / definitions Patterns of disease emergence Transmission Disease triangle Virus dynamics in grass communities
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What is transmission? The process by which a pathogen passes from a source of infection to a new host and infects that host
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Why is it crucial? (Why is it the central ecological challenge for pathogens?) What is transmission? The process by which a pathogen passes from a source of infection to a new host and infects that host
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Why is it crucial? Host individuals are spatially discrete Hosts defend themselves (resistance) Hosts die (especially if infected!) What is transmission? The process by which a pathogen passes from a source of infection to a new host and infects that host
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Modes of transmission Direct contact (e.g. handshake) –Common cold Indirect contact (e.g. sneezing) –Measles Sex –AIDS Vector (species that transmits pathogen without experiencing disease; usually arthropods) –Malaria Trophic (from prey to predator) –Schistosomiasis Environmental reservoir (free-living stage) –Cholera Vertical (from parent to offspring) –Syphilis
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Density-dependent transmission Expected for transmission via –Direct contact (non-sexual) –Indirect contact And sometimes for transmission via –Sex –Vector –Trophic interaction –Environmental reservoir
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Density-dependent transmission Can regulate host populations Creates linkages to other variables (abiotic, competition, predation)
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Density-dependence predicts minimum threshold density for epidemic
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Transmission chains for contact- and vector-transmitted pathogens
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R 0 – the basic reproductive ratio The number of individuals infected by a single infectious host introduced into a population of uninfected hosts Critical value of R 0 =1 Simplest (of many) theoretical formulas: R 0 = β/g, where β = ? g = ?
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R 0 – the basic reproductive ratio The number of individuals infected by a single infectious host introduced into a population of uninfected hosts Critical value of R 0 =1 Simplest (of many) theoretical formulas: R 0 = β/g, where β = transmission rate g = rate infected individuals recover or die
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Lecture outline Basic concepts / definitions Patterns of disease emergence Transmission Disease triangle Virus dynamics in grass communities
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Strengbom et al. 2002
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Yates et al. 2002 Bioscience HHHH
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Lecture outline Basic concepts / definitions Patterns of disease emergence Transmission Disease triangle Virus dynamics in grass communities
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nativesinvaders resources Generalist pathogens Specialist pathogens
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barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV)
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Rhopalosiphum padi (the bird cherry-oat aphid)
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ELISA
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Setaria lutescens (Yellow foxtail) Avena fatua (Wild oats) Digitaria sanguinalis (Hairy crabgrass) Lolium multiflorum (Italian ryegrass)
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monocultures
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Intraspecific transmission Setaria Digitaria Lolium Avena
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Pathogen spillover in multihost community Setaria Digitaria Lolium Avena
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Pathogen spillover Power and Mitchell 2004 Am Nat
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quadcultures (2003) monocultures
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Apparent competition SetariaDigitariaLolium Avena
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pathogen host species A (reservoir) host species B + -
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LoliumAvena resources pathogen
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bicultures
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nativesinvaders resources Generalist pathogens Specialist pathogens
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Lecture outline Basic concepts / definitions Patterns of disease emergence Transmission Disease triangle Virus dynamics in grass communities
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