Unraveling the Mechanistic Links Between Species Diversity and Infection Risk From Zoonotic Pathogens With Direct Transmission Among Reservoir Hosts: Rodent‐Orthohantavirus Systems as Models

ABSTRACT To explain patterns between anthropogenic loss of species diversity and the rise in the number of novel zoonotic diseases, the “dilution effect” hypothesis predicts that with lower species diversity, infection risk will increase. The underlying mechanisms have been largely investigated in s...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andreas Eleftheriou, Angela D. Luis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-06-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71597
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849429476640817152
author Andreas Eleftheriou
Angela D. Luis
author_facet Andreas Eleftheriou
Angela D. Luis
author_sort Andreas Eleftheriou
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT To explain patterns between anthropogenic loss of species diversity and the rise in the number of novel zoonotic diseases, the “dilution effect” hypothesis predicts that with lower species diversity, infection risk will increase. The underlying mechanisms have been largely investigated in systems where pathogen transmission is vector‐borne or environmental. Relatively less research has been conducted in systems where transmission is direct, such as with orthohantaviruses (hereafter hantaviruses) and their rodent reservoir hosts. These systems are commonly cited as supporting a negative diversity‐disease pattern. To motivate empirical research on underlying mechanisms driving this pattern, we extend a mechanistic framework that links species diversity and infection prevalence of directly transmitted zoonotic pathogens by using rodent‐hantavirus systems in the Americas as models. Additionally, we summarize empirical studies, synthesize mechanistic evidence, and identify knowledge gaps. Our findings suggest that host regulation is a key mechanism likely to drive diversity‐disease patterns in rodent‐hantavirus systems of the Americas. Other mechanisms have received less empirical support but also less attention. Although host regulation likely functions via density‐dependent transmission, and can thus change contact rates among hosts, consequences to other mechanisms have been neglected. As observed in rodent‐hantavirus systems in the Americas, we propose that for a negative diversity‐disease pattern to manifest, the primary reservoir host species should be resilient to anthropogenic disturbance but also vulnerable to competition, predation, or both, and the “diversity” measure should be associated with host density.
format Article
id doaj-art-7761204611744de9a4e25d2d7139ba47
institution Kabale University
issn 2045-7758
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Ecology and Evolution
spelling doaj-art-7761204611744de9a4e25d2d7139ba472025-08-20T03:28:21ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582025-06-01156n/an/a10.1002/ece3.71597Unraveling the Mechanistic Links Between Species Diversity and Infection Risk From Zoonotic Pathogens With Direct Transmission Among Reservoir Hosts: Rodent‐Orthohantavirus Systems as ModelsAndreas Eleftheriou0Angela D. Luis1Wildlife Biology Program University of Montana Missoula Montana USAWildlife Biology Program University of Montana Missoula Montana USAABSTRACT To explain patterns between anthropogenic loss of species diversity and the rise in the number of novel zoonotic diseases, the “dilution effect” hypothesis predicts that with lower species diversity, infection risk will increase. The underlying mechanisms have been largely investigated in systems where pathogen transmission is vector‐borne or environmental. Relatively less research has been conducted in systems where transmission is direct, such as with orthohantaviruses (hereafter hantaviruses) and their rodent reservoir hosts. These systems are commonly cited as supporting a negative diversity‐disease pattern. To motivate empirical research on underlying mechanisms driving this pattern, we extend a mechanistic framework that links species diversity and infection prevalence of directly transmitted zoonotic pathogens by using rodent‐hantavirus systems in the Americas as models. Additionally, we summarize empirical studies, synthesize mechanistic evidence, and identify knowledge gaps. Our findings suggest that host regulation is a key mechanism likely to drive diversity‐disease patterns in rodent‐hantavirus systems of the Americas. Other mechanisms have received less empirical support but also less attention. Although host regulation likely functions via density‐dependent transmission, and can thus change contact rates among hosts, consequences to other mechanisms have been neglected. As observed in rodent‐hantavirus systems in the Americas, we propose that for a negative diversity‐disease pattern to manifest, the primary reservoir host species should be resilient to anthropogenic disturbance but also vulnerable to competition, predation, or both, and the “diversity” measure should be associated with host density.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71597community compositiondensity‐dependent transmissionemerging infectious diseasespopulation regulationrodent‐borne zoonosesspecies diversity
spellingShingle Andreas Eleftheriou
Angela D. Luis
Unraveling the Mechanistic Links Between Species Diversity and Infection Risk From Zoonotic Pathogens With Direct Transmission Among Reservoir Hosts: Rodent‐Orthohantavirus Systems as Models
Ecology and Evolution
community composition
density‐dependent transmission
emerging infectious diseases
population regulation
rodent‐borne zoonoses
species diversity
title Unraveling the Mechanistic Links Between Species Diversity and Infection Risk From Zoonotic Pathogens With Direct Transmission Among Reservoir Hosts: Rodent‐Orthohantavirus Systems as Models
title_full Unraveling the Mechanistic Links Between Species Diversity and Infection Risk From Zoonotic Pathogens With Direct Transmission Among Reservoir Hosts: Rodent‐Orthohantavirus Systems as Models
title_fullStr Unraveling the Mechanistic Links Between Species Diversity and Infection Risk From Zoonotic Pathogens With Direct Transmission Among Reservoir Hosts: Rodent‐Orthohantavirus Systems as Models
title_full_unstemmed Unraveling the Mechanistic Links Between Species Diversity and Infection Risk From Zoonotic Pathogens With Direct Transmission Among Reservoir Hosts: Rodent‐Orthohantavirus Systems as Models
title_short Unraveling the Mechanistic Links Between Species Diversity and Infection Risk From Zoonotic Pathogens With Direct Transmission Among Reservoir Hosts: Rodent‐Orthohantavirus Systems as Models
title_sort unraveling the mechanistic links between species diversity and infection risk from zoonotic pathogens with direct transmission among reservoir hosts rodent orthohantavirus systems as models
topic community composition
density‐dependent transmission
emerging infectious diseases
population regulation
rodent‐borne zoonoses
species diversity
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71597
work_keys_str_mv AT andreaseleftheriou unravelingthemechanisticlinksbetweenspeciesdiversityandinfectionriskfromzoonoticpathogenswithdirecttransmissionamongreservoirhostsrodentorthohantavirussystemsasmodels
AT angeladluis unravelingthemechanisticlinksbetweenspeciesdiversityandinfectionriskfromzoonoticpathogenswithdirecttransmissionamongreservoirhostsrodentorthohantavirussystemsasmodels