Originally published March 2 2005
Predators proven useful for keeping parasites under control in animal populations
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor
Ecologists studying the ways that parasite levels can rapidly change have discovered that predators can markedly affect parasite levels in host populations. When predators strongly prefer hosts with parasites, the parasites quickly become extinct. When predators do not prefer hosts with parasites, the parasites and the hosts both become extinct quickly. However, when predators mildly prefer hosts with parasites, parasite levels can still fluctuate wildly.
What provokes sudden, dramatic outbreaks of diseases, large fluctuations in parasite abundance, and rapid termination of epidemics?
The search for drivers of these complex behaviors has become more urgent as epidemics in wildlife populations continue to arise.
Recently ecologists have realized that other species may strongly shape disease dynamics.
Predators are particularly interesting because they often prefer to attack parasitized hosts.
To answer this question, Spencer R. Hall, Meghan A. Duffy, and Carla E. C�ceres studied a simple model which shows how predators that strongly prefer parasitized hosts can introduce "Allee effects" for parasites at lower productivity and sudden but unavoidable extinction of parasites at higher productivity.
In the former case, parasites have difficulty invading a host population, while in the latter case, parasites cannot persist with their hosts, even if they can invade.
When predators less strongly prefer parasitized hosts, these dramatic behaviors diminish, but predators can still trigger large fluctuations of parasite abundance at higher productivity.
Surprisingly, when predators show no preference for or even avoid parasitized hosts, interactions between the two enemies can drive both host and parasite unavoidably extinct.
These findings stress the importance of the biological and ecosystem background in which hosts and parasites interact.
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