Date: March 24, 2017
Source: University of Edinburgh
How a disease outbreak affects a group of animals depends on the breakdown of ages in the population, research has shown.
The
findings could help scientists better understand how events such as
disease outbreaks may affect certain groups in a population.
Scientists
sought to examine how a spread of ages can influence a population's
health, by simulating an outbreak of disease in small marine animals.
With
lab experiments and computer modelling, they found that disease spread
can vary depending on the age at which individuals are exposed to
infection, and the age at which females in the group become mothers.
Experiments
in the latest study found that offspring of younger mothers were more
at risk from infection. The finding builds upon previous knowledge that
younger individuals are more at risk.
Taking
these factors into account, computer models showed that when death
rates are high, disease can spread faster -- even as populations fall.
This contradicts the expectation that disease should spread most easily
in dense populations, in which individuals interact more.
Researchers
from the University of Edinburgh carried out lab experiments with water
fleas, examining how four generations of the small crustaceans
responded to a common bacterial infection. Their results were used to
build a mathematical model of how the organisms might respond in the
long term to threats such as incidence of disease.
Their study, published in Ecology Letters, was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council and the Wellcome Trust.
Jess
Clark, of the University of Edinburgh's School of Biological Sciences,
who led the study, said: "Many societies around the world are
experiencing aging populations, and investigating the impact of this
might lend valuable insight into how such populations might respond to
an outbreak of disease."
Story Source:
Materials provided by University of Edinburgh. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
/story_source
Journal Reference:
1 Jessica
Clark, Jennie S. Garbutt, Luke McNally, Tom J. Little. Disease spread
in age structured populations with maternal age effects. Ecology
Letters, 2017; 20 (4): 445 DOI: 10.1111/ele.12745
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