Litcius/Paper detail

Plague transforms positive effects of precipitation on prairie dogs to negative effects

Dean E. Biggins, David A. Eads, Jerry L. Godbey

2021International Journal for Parasitology Parasites and Wildlife10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

spp.) in replicated plots treated with deltamethrin dust and in non-treated plots for paired comparisons. There was a significant interaction between precipitation and treatment. When we reduced plague vector fleas, prairie dog visual counts tended to increase with increasing precipitation. Simultaneously, there was a negative relationship between counts and precipitation on paired plots where plague was not managed, suggesting that plague transformed and reversed the otherwise beneficial effect of increased precipitation. Are the good years gone for prairie dogs? Even if the good years are not gone, they are perhaps relatively scarce compared to historic times prior to the invasion of plague. This scenario might apply to other ecosystems and may pose broad conservation challenges in western North America.

Topics & Concepts

Plague (disease)Yersinia pestisCynomys ludovicianusPrecipitationFleaBiologyPopulationEcologyEcosystemPrairie dogVeterinary medicineGeographyDemographyMedicineVirulenceArchaeologySociologyMeteorologyGeneBiochemistryYersinia bacterium, plague, ectoparasites researchAnimal Ecology and Behavior StudiesEthnobotanical and Medicinal Plants Studies