Slow-lived birds and bats carry higher pathogen loads




Xu Yanjie, Laine Veronika N., Meramo Katarina, Santangeli Andrea, Poosakkannu Anbu, Suominen Kati M., Gaultier Simon, Keller Verena, Brotons Lluís, Pulliainen Arto T., Lilley Thomas M., Lehikoinen Aleksi

PublisherCell Press

2024

One Earth

One Earth

7

6

1121

1132

2590-3330

2590-3322

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2024.04.021

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2024.04.021

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/421362771



Wildlife and zoonotic diseases are increasingly impacting human society, the food chain, and wildlife; therefore, proactive mitigation tools for predicting large-scale risk of the relevant pathogens are urgently needed. Birds and bats are large-scale disease reservoirs and transmitters. However, holistic understanding for which bird and bat species act as reservoirs for pathogens remains understudied. Here, we test the extent to which the features related to the mobile species and local climate identify reservoir hosts for the 18 most-sampled pathogens across Europe. Species with slower pace of life (i.e., larger bodied and longer lived), sedentary species, and forest species had high pathogen prevalence. Temperature was the most important predictor for pathogen prevalence, but its effects varied in different directions. Overall, host species traits and climatic gradients robustly predicted pathogen prevalence, especially for non-vector-transmitted pathogens. We offer a data-driven basis for developing targeted interventions to mitigate impacts of zoonotic diseases, particularly in the face of climate change.


This work is financially supported by Research Council of Finland grants 329251 (to T.M.L., A.L., A.P., A.T.P., and Y.X.) and 323527 (to A.L.), European Commission through the Horizon 2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions individual fellowships 101027534 (to A.S.), and Sakari Alhopuro Foundation grants 20200071 and 2021008 (to A.P.).


Last updated on 2024-28-11 at 12:07