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Affiliation and disease risk: social networks mediate gut microbial transmission among rhesus macaques
- Source :
- Anim Behav
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- In social animals, affiliative behaviours bring many benefits, but also costs such as disease risk. The ways in which affiliation may affect the risk of infectious agent transmission remain unclear. Moreover, studies linking variation in affiliative interactions to infectious agent incidence/diversity have speculated that disease transmission may have occurred, rather than revealing that transmission did occur. We address these gaps using the phylogenetics of commensal gut Escherichia coli to determine whether affiliative grooming and huddling social networks mediated microbial transmission among rhesus macaques. We collected behavioural and microbial data from adult macaques across a 12-week period that was split into two 6-week phases to better detect dyadic transmission. We reconstructed undirected social networks from affiliative interactions and reconstructed microbial transmission networks from the pairwise phylogenetic similarity of E. coli pulsotypes from macaques within and across adjacent sampling events. Macaque E. coli pulsotypes were more phylogenetically similar to each other than to environmental isolates, which established a premise for socially mediated transmission. Dyadic grooming and huddling frequencies strongly influenced the likelihood of E. coli transmission during the second data collection phase, but not the first. Macaques that were more central/well connected in both their grooming and huddling networks were also more central in the E. coli transmission networks. Our results confirmed that affiliative grooming and huddling behaviours mediate the transmission of gut microbes among rhesus macaques, particularly among females and high-ranking individuals. The detectability of socially mediated E. coli transmission maybe partially masked by environmental acquisition in males, or by high frequencies of interactions in captivity. Predicting the potential transmission pathways of gastrointestinal parasites and pathogens, our findings add to current knowledge of the coevolutionary relationships between affiliative behaviour and health and may be used to identify 'superspreader' individuals as potential targets for disease control strategies.
- Subjects :
- superspreader
0106 biological sciences
infectious disease
Captivity
affiliative behaviour
Biology
Behavioral Science & Comparative Psychology
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Macaque
Article
affiliative behavior
biology.animal
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology
Aetiology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Social network
business.industry
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
05 social sciences
transmission
Biological Sciences
biology.organism_classification
Rhesus macaque
Infectious Diseases
Good Health and Well Being
commensal E. coli
Infectious disease (medical specialty)
Evolutionary biology
Disease risk
Social animal
social network
Animal Science and Zoology
Infection
business
Disease transmission
rhesus macaque
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00033472
- Volume :
- 151
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Animal behaviour
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....997df9621b103e2b0e35a9295427f8ac