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Infection of the fittest: devil facial tumour disease has greatest effect on individuals with highest reproductive output
Authors:Konstans Wells  Rodrigo K. Hamede  Douglas H. Kerlin  Andrew Storfer  Paul A. Hohenlohe  Menna E. Jones  Hamish I. McCallum
Affiliation:1. Environmental Futures Research Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, QLD, Australia;2. School of Biological Sciences, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tas, Australia;3. School of Biological Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA;4. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID, USA
Abstract:Emerging infectious diseases rarely affect all members of a population equally and determining how individuals’ susceptibility to infection is related to other components of their fitness is critical to understanding disease impacts at a population level and for predicting evolutionary trajectories. We introduce a novel state‐space model framework to investigate survival and fecundity of Tasmanian devils (Sarcophilus harrisii) affected by a transmissible cancer, devil facial tumour disease. We show that those devils that become host to tumours have otherwise greater fitness, with higher survival and fecundity rates prior to disease‐induced death than non‐host individuals that do not become infected, although high tumour loads lead to high mortality. Our finding that individuals with the greatest reproductive value are those most affected by the cancer demonstrates the need to quantify both survival and fecundity in context of disease progression for understanding the impact of disease on wildlife populations.
Keywords:Bayesian capture–  recapture  disease burden  disease progression  disease risk  fecundity  individual fitness  pathogenesis  transmissible cancer  tumour growth
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