Literature detail

Models of Eucalypt phenology predict bat population flux.

John R Giles1 Raina K Plowright2 Peggy Eby3 Alison J Peel1 Hamish McCallum1
Affiliations 3 institutions
  1. Environmental Futures Research Institute Griffith University Brisbane Queensland 4111 Australia.
  2. Department of Microbiology and Immunology Montana State University Bozeman Montana 59717.
  3. School of Biological, Earth, and Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales Sydney New South Wales 2052 Australia.
PMID 27891217 2016 Ecol Evol eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

Fruit bats (Pteropodidae) have received increased attention after the recent emergence of notable viral pathogens of bat origin. Their vagility hinders data collection on abundance and distribution, which constrains modeling efforts and our understanding of bat ecology, viral dynamics, and spillover. We addressed this knowledge gap with models and data on the occurrence and abundance of nectarivorous fruit bat populations at 3 day roosts in southeast Queensland. We used environmental drivers of nectar production as predictors and explored relationships between bat abundance and virus spillover. Specifically, we developed several novel modeling tools motivated by complexities of fruit bat foraging ecology, including: (1) a dataset of spatial variables comprising Eucalypt-focused vegetation indices, cumulative precipitation, and temperature anomaly; (2) an algorithm that associated bat population response with spatial covariates in a spatially and temporally relevant way given our current understanding of bat foraging behavior; and (3) a thorough statistical learning approach to finding optimal covariate combinations. We identified covariates that classify fruit bat occupancy at each of our three study roosts with 86-93% accuracy. Negative binomial models explained 43-53% of the variation in observed abundance across roosts. Our models suggest that spatiotemporal heterogeneity in Eucalypt-based food resources could drive at least 50% of bat population behavior at the landscape scale. We found that 13 spillover events were observed within the foraging range of our study roosts, and they occurred during times when models predicted low population abundance. Our results suggest that, in southeast Queensland, spillover may not be driven by large aggregations of fruit bats attracted by nectar-based resources, but rather by behavior of smaller resident subpopulations. Our models and data integrated remote sensing and statistical learning to make inferences on bat ecology and disease dynamics. This work provides a foundation for further studies on landscape-scale population movement and spatiotemporal disease dynamics.

Foraging ecology fruit bat Hendra virus henipavirus machine learning population dynamics Pteropus spillover viral prevalence

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

3 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Spatiotemporal variation in Eucalypt-based food resources drives fruit bat population dynamics, and spillover events such as Hendra virus occurred when bat abundance was low, suggesting ecological factors influencing reservoir behavior and transmission risk in southeast Queensland.

Virus
Host
Location
Supporting text

We addressed this knowledge gap with models and data on the occurrence and abundance of nectarivorous fruit bat populations at 3 day roosts in southeast Queensland... We found that 13 spillover events were observed within the foraging range of our study roosts, and they occurred during times when models predicted low population abundance.

Method
ecological modeling; remote sensing; statistical learning
Geographic raw
southeast Queensland
Country inferred
Australia
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Thirteen Hendra virus spillover events from fruit bats to humans occurred within the foraging range of Pteropus roosts in southeast Queensland.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

We found that 13 spillover events were observed within the foraging range of our study roosts in southeast Queensland.

Method
modeling; environmental analysis; statistical inference
Study design
field surveillance
Transmission direction
animal-to-human
Geographic raw
southeast Queensland
Country inferred
Australia
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

Fruit bat populations at roosts in southeast Queensland were monitored to model abundance and assess relationships with Hendra virus spillover events.

Virus
Location
Supporting text

We addressed this knowledge gap with models and data on the occurrence and abundance of nectarivorous fruit bat populations at 3 day roosts in southeast Queensland... We found that 13 spillover events were observed within the foraging range of our study roosts.

Method
ecological modeling; remote sensing; statistical learning
Geographic raw
southeast Queensland
Country inferred
Australia