Demographic rescue falters when pathogens are present
Data files
Oct 28, 2024 version files 20.33 KB
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Demographic_rescue_complete_dataset.csv
18.89 KB
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README.md
1.44 KB
Abstract
As natural populations continue to decline globally, direct forms of intervention are increasingly necessary to prevent extinction. One type of intervention, known as demographic rescue, occurs when individuals are added directly to a population to increase abundance and ultimately prevent population extinction. However, the role of infectious disease in demographic rescue remains unknown. To examine the effects of pathogens on demographic rescue, we used a host-pathogen system with the aquatic crustacean Daphnia dentifera as the host and the fungus Metschnikowia bicuspidata as the pathogen. We constructed a randomized 3 x 2 factorial experiment with three rescue treatments (none, low, high) and two pathogen treatments (unexposed, exposed), where the pathogen was introduced via infected individuals during rescue events. We found that adding more individuals to demographically depressed populations increased abundance over the short term; highly supplemented populations initially had 62% more individuals than populations that had no introduced individuals. However, by the end of the experiment, populations that did not have any individuals introduced averaged 640% higher abundance than populations where infected individuals had been added. Thus, the introduction of infected individuals can result in worse demographic outcomes for populations than if no rescue is attempted.
Each of the below is a column heading and its description, grouped by Experimental details and Response variables.
Experimental Details:
week = week in which sampling occurred (where 1 = 7 days after the beginning of the experiment, 2 = 14 days after the beginning of the experiment, etc.)
beaker.id = unique identifier for each replicate beaker (population)
block = the block (timing) of a beaker (two blocks total)
beaker.num = a randomly generated value for the order in which beakers were sampled each week
treat.id = an indicator of the combined pathogen + rescue treatment. A = unexposed, no rescue, B = unexposed, low rescue, C = unexposed, high rescue, D = pathogen-exposed, no rescue, E = pathogen-exposed, low rescue, F = pathogen-exposed, high rescue
metsch.treat = pathogen (Metschnikowia bicuspidata) treatment. UN = unexposed to the pathogen. INF = exposed to the pathogen
sup.treat = rescue (supplementation) treatment: none, low or high
Response Variables
Values are the number of individuals in each category found in the 55mL subsample of the population on a given sampling day.
ad.female = adult female
juv.female = juvenile female
ad.male = adult male
juv.male = juvenile male
ad.inf.female = infected adult female
juv.inf.female = infected juvenile female
ad.inf.male = infected adult male
juv.inf. male = infected juvenile male
