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      Linking anthropogenic resources to wildlife–pathogen dynamics: a review and meta-analysis

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          Abstract

          Urbanisation and agriculture cause declines for many wildlife, but some species benefit from novel resources, especially food, provided in human-dominated habitats. Resulting shifts in wildlife ecology can alter infectious disease dynamics and create opportunities for cross-species transmission, yet predicting host–pathogen responses to resource provisioning is challenging. Factors enhancing transmission, such as increased aggregation, could be offset by better host immunity due to improved nutrition. Here, we conduct a review and meta-analysis to show that food provisioning results in highly heterogeneous infection outcomes that depend on pathogen type and anthropogenic food source. We also find empirical support for behavioural and immune mechanisms through which human-provided resources alter host exposure and tolerance to pathogens. A review of recent theoretical models of resource provisioning and infection dynamics shows that changes in host contact rates and immunity produce strong non-linear responses in pathogen invasion and prevalence. By integrating results of our meta-analysis back into a theoretical framework, we find provisioning amplifies pathogen invasion under increased host aggregation and tolerance, but reduces transmission if provisioned food decreases dietary exposure to parasites. These results carry implications for wildlife disease management and highlight areas for future work, such as how resource shifts might affect virulence evolution.

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          Depletion, degradation, and recovery potential of estuaries and coastal seas.

          Estuarine and coastal transformation is as old as civilization yet has dramatically accelerated over the past 150 to 300 years. Reconstructed time lines, causes, and consequences of change in 12 once diverse and productive estuaries and coastal seas worldwide show similar patterns: Human impacts have depleted >90% of formerly important species, destroyed >65% of seagrass and wetland habitat, degraded water quality, and accelerated species invasions. Twentieth-century conservation efforts achieved partial recovery of upper trophic levels but have so far failed to restore former ecosystem structure and function. Our results provide detailed historical baselines and quantitative targets for ecosystem-based management and marine conservation.
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            R: a language and environment for statistic computing

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              Meta-analysis: recent developments in quantitative methods for literature reviews.

              We describe the history and current status of the meta-analytic enterprise. The advantages and historical criticisms of meta-analysis are described, as are the basic steps in a meta-analysis and the role of effect sizes as chief coins of the meta-analytic realm. Advantages of the meta-analytic procedures include seeing the "landscape" of a research domain, keeping statistical significance in perspective, minimizing wasted data, becoming intimate with the data summarized, asking focused research questions, and finding moderator variables. Much of the criticism of meta-analysis has been based on simple misunderstanding of how meta-analyses are actually carried out. Criticisms of meta-analysis that are applicable are equally applicable to traditional, nonquantitative, narrative reviews of the literature. Much of the remainder of the chapter deals with the processes of effect size estimation, the understanding of the heterogeneity of the obtained effect sizes, and the practical and scientific importance of the effect sizes obtained.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecol Lett
                Ecol. Lett
                ele
                Ecology Letters
                BlackWell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                1461-023X
                1461-0248
                May 2015
                21 March 2015
                : 18
                : 5
                : 483-495
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia Athens, GA, USA
                [2 ]Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, University of Glasgow Glasgow, G12 8QQ, UK
                [3 ]MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research Glasgow, G61 1QH, UK
                Author notes
                * Correspondence: E-mail: dbecker@ 123456uga.edu

                Editor, Kevin Lafferty

                Article
                10.1111/ele.12428
                4403965
                25808224
                bc615051-756b-4ca2-a85d-b68c780b1e74
                © 2015 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd and CNRS.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 23 July 2014
                : 12 February 2015
                Categories
                Review and Synthesis

                Ecology
                aggregation,agriculture,foraging ecology,host–parasite interactions,immune defence,infectious disease ecology,mathematical models,supplemental feeding,urbanisation

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