Skip to main content
Dryad

Data from: Contact and contagion: bighorn sheep demographic states vary in probability of transmission given contact

Cite this dataset

Manlove, Kezia R. et al. (2018). Data from: Contact and contagion: bighorn sheep demographic states vary in probability of transmission given contact [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.q7v72

Abstract

1. Understanding both contact and probability of transmission given contact are key to managing wildlife disease. However, wildlife disease research tends to focus on contact heterogeneity, in part because probability of transmission given contact is notoriously difficult to measure. Here we present a first step toward empirically investigating probability of transmission given contact in free-ranging wildlife. 2. We used measured contact networks to test whether bighorn sheep demographic states vary systematically in infectiousness or susceptibility to Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae, an agent responsible for bighorn sheep pneumonia. 3. We built covariates using contact network metrics, demographic information, and infection status, and used logistic regression to relate those covariates to lamb survival. The covariate set contained degree, a classic network metric describing node centrality, but we also built covariates that broke the network metrics into particular categories that differentiated between contacts with yearlings, ewes with lambs, and ewes without lambs, and animals with and without active infections. 4. Yearlings, ewes with lambs, and ewes without lambs showed similar group membership patterns, but direct interactions involving touch occurred at a rate two orders of magnitude higher between lambs and reproductive ewes than between any classes of adults or yearlings, and one order of magnitude higher than direct interactions between lambs. 5. Although yearlings and non-reproductive bighorn ewes regularly carried Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae, our models suggest that a contact with an infected reproductive ewe had approximately five times the odds of producing a lamb mortality event of an identical contact with an infected dry ewe or yearling. Consequently, management actions targeting infected animals might lead to unnecessary removal of young animals who carry pathogens but rarely transmit. 6. This analysis demonstrates a simple logistic regression approach for testing a priori hypotheses about variation in odds of transmission given contact for free-ranging hosts, and may be broadly applicable for investigations in wildlife disease ecology.

Usage notes

Location

Oregon
Hells Canyon
Washington
Idaho