Culling-induced perturbation of social networks of wild geese reinforces rather than disrupts associations among survivors.
Abstract
Wildlife populations may be the subject of management interventions for disease control that can have unintended, counterproductive effects. Social structure exerts a strong influence over infectious disease transmission in addition to other characteristics of populations such as size and density that are the primary target for disease control. Social network approaches have been widely used to understand disease transmission in wildlife but rarely in the context of perturbations, such as culling, despite the likely impacts of such disturbance on social structure and disease dynamics. Here we present a 'removal' study of a free-living population of resident Canada geese
Key words
- disease transmission
- infectious diseases
- wild animals
- disease control
- wildlife management
- wild birds
- wildlife conservation
- disease prevention
- infection control
- culling
- endemic species
- disease vectors
- reservoir hosts
- animal health
- domestic animals
- animal behaviour
- poultry
- waterfowl
- native species
- vectors
- hosts
- Behaviour
- aquatic organisms
- aquatic animals