Literature detail

Modelling land use-induced foraging distributions of flying foxes and emerging spillover risks.

Erin Stafford1 Åke Brännström2,3,4 Kyrre Kausrud5 Henrik Sjödin1,6
Affiliations 6 institutions
  1. Department of Epidemiology and Global Health, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden.
  2. Department of Mathematics and Mathematical Statistics, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden.
  3. Complexity Science and Evolution Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST), Okinawa, Japan.
  4. Advancing Systems Analysis Program, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), Laxenburg, Austria.
  5. Norwegian Veterinary Institute, Ås, Norway.
  6. Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umeå, Sweden.
PMID 41704560 2026 One Health eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

Despite their critical role as reservoir hosts for many zoonotic diseases, the impact of land-use and land-cover changes (LCLUC) on flying foxes' interactions with humans remains unclear, posing a potential public health risk. To address this, we apply optimal foraging theory and individual-based modelling to simulate flying-fox movement and population dynamics under various LCLUC scenarios. After validating our model against available data, we analyze the effects of agriculturalization, urbanization, forest fragmentation, and reforestation on flying-fox densities across synthetic landscapes of urban, forest, orchard, and water-body habitats. Our findings indicate that habitat disruption-particularly fragmentation through urbanization-significantly increases the risk of zoonotic spillover events by increasing contacts between species. Scenarios of forest degradation reveal that ecologically degraded forest environments can further exacerbate this risk. Additionally, we find that reforestation can alleviate spillover risk. These results underscore the importance of conservation and habitat restoration as critical strategies for mitigating zoonotic disease transmission.

Flying foxes Land-use and land-cover change Mathematical modelling Optimal foraging theory Zoonotic spillover

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Habitat fragmentation and urbanization alter flying fox foraging ecology and population distributions, increasing interspecies contact and spillover risk.

Virus
Not specified
Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We apply optimal foraging theory and individual-based modelling to simulate flying-fox movement and population dynamics under various land-use and land-cover change scenarios. Habitat disruption—particularly fragmentation through urbanization—significantly increases the risk of zoonotic spillover events by increasing contacts between species.

Method
individual-based modelling; optimal foraging theory