Published February 6, 2025 | Version v2
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Data from: The release of non-native gamebirds is associated with amplified zoonotic disease risk

  • 1. University of Exeter
  • 2. UK Health Security Agency
  • 3. Cardiff University

Description

Spillback – where non-native species increase native pathogen prevalence – is potentially an important mechanism by which non-natives contribute to zoonotic disease emergence. However, spillback has not yet been directly demonstrated because it is difficult to disentangle from confounding factors which correlate with non-native species abundance and native pathogen prevalence. Here, we capitalise on replicated, quasi-experimental releases of non-native pheasants (Phasianus colchicus) to compare vector abundance and native pathogen prevalence between sites with similar local conditions but different non-native densities. Prevalence of Borrelia sp. (the causative agent of Lyme disease) in questing ticks was almost 2.5x higher in woods where pheasants are released compared to control woods, with a particularly strong effect on Borrelia garinii, a bird specialist genospecies. Furthermore, adult (but not nymphal) ticks tended to be more abundant at pheasant-release woods. This work provides evidence that non-native species can impact zoonotic pathogen prevalence via spillback in ecologically relevant contexts.

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Related works

Is source of
10.5061/dryad.d7wm37q9d (DOI)