Litcius/Paper detail

Comparing the Indirect Effects between Exploiters in Predator-Prey and Host-Pathogen Systems

Michael H. Cortez, Meghan A. Duffy

2020The American Naturalist10 citationsDOI

Abstract

AbstractIn multipredator and multipathogen systems, exploiters interact indirectly via shared victim species. Interspecific prey competition and the degree of predator specialization are known to influence whether predators have competitive (i.e., (-,-)) or noncompetitive (i.e., (-,+) or (+,+)) indirect interactions. Much less is known about the population-level indirect interactions between pathogens that infect the same populations of host species. In this study, we use two-predator-two-prey and two-host-two-pathogen models to compare the indirect effects between predators with the indirect effects between pathogens. We focus on how the indirect interactions between pathogens are affected by the competitive abilities of susceptible and infected hosts, whether the pathogens are specialists or generalists, and the transmission pathway (direct vs. environmental transmission). In many cases, indirect effects between pathogens and predators follow similar patterns, for example, more positive indirect effects with increased interspecific competition between victim species. However, the indirect effects between pathogens can qualitatively differ, for example, more negative indirect effects with increased interspecific host competition. These contrasting patterns show that an important mechanistic difference between predatory and parasitic interactions (specifically, whether interactions are immediately lethal) can have important population-level effects on the indirect interactions between exploiters.

Topics & Concepts

Interspecific competitionPredationBiologyGeneralist and specialist speciesPredatorCompetition (biology)Host (biology)PopulationIndirect effectEcologyPathogenMicrobiologyHabitatDemographySociologyLawPolitical scienceEvolution and Genetic DynamicsZoonotic diseases and public healthAnimal Disease Management and Epidemiology