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Female elk contacts are neither frequency nor density dependent

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Title Female elk contacts are neither frequency nor density dependent
Names Cross, P. C. (creator)
Creech, Tyler G. (creator)
Ebinger, M. R. (creator)
Manlove, K. (creator)
Irvine, K. (creator)
Henningsen, J. (creator)
Roberson, J. (creator)
Scurlock, B. M. (creator)
Creel, S. (creator)
Date Issued 2013-09 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work.
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Ecological Society of America and can be found at: http://esa.org/.
Abstract Identifying drivers of contact rates among individuals is critical to understanding
disease dynamics and implementing targeted control measures. We studied the interaction
patterns of 149 female elk (Cervus canadensis) distributed across five different regions of
western Wyoming over three years, defining a contact as an approach within one body length
(~2 m). Using hierarchical models that account for correlations within individuals, pairs, and
groups, we found that pairwise contact rates within a group declined by a factor of three as
group sizes increased 33-fold. Per capita contact rates, however, increased with group size
according to a power function, such that female elk contact rates fell in between the
predictions of density- or frequency-dependent disease models. We found similar patterns for
the duration of contacts. Our results suggest that larger elk groups are likely to play a
disproportionate role in the disease dynamics of directly transmitted infections in elk.
Supplemental feeding of elk had a limited impact on pairwise interaction rates and durations,
but per capita rates were more than two times higher on feeding grounds. Our statistical
approach decomposes the variation in contact rate into individual, dyadic, and environmental
effects, and provides insight into factors that may be targeted by disease control programs. In
particular, female elk contact patterns were driven more by environmental factors such as
group size than by either individual or dyad effects.
Genre Article
Topic brucellosis
Identifier Cross, P. C., Creech, T. G., Ebinger, M. R., Manlove, K., Irvine, K., Henningsen, J., . . . Creel, S. (2013). Female elk contacts are neither frequency nor density dependent. Ecology, 94(9), 2076-2086. doi:10.1890/12-2086.1

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