In terms of population level effects from disease what are the main ones and what lead to and what are the 2 main individual level
Population 1) reproductive rate 2) mortality 3) behaviour/migration -> effect population size -> ecosystem flow on effects (top-down to bottom-up) Individual 1) mortality 2) sub-lethal effects at host level
Ecosystem flow-on effects (Tropic cascades) what are the topic levels in the ecosystem
BOTTOM - producers - plants - primary consumers - herbivores - secondary consumers - carnivores that feed on herbivores - tertiary consumers TOP
Give examples of disease that cause trophic cascades top-down control and bottom-up control
Top-down control: Devil facial tumour disease and effects on small marsupials (increase feral cats as competition with Tassie devils result in decrease in quolls)
- Problems start at the top with carnivores
Bottom-up control: Rabbit haemorrhagic disease and effects on Iberian lynx (iberian lynx dependent on rabbit numbers, crash correlated)
- Problem start at the bottom with producers or herbivores
Chlamydia in koalas what does the lack of disease mean for individual and population levels
What are 7 main factors the predispose rare species to extinction due to disease
White Nose Syndrome (Pseudogymnoascus destructans) what is the pathogen, the effect on the bat, location, population and individual level
White Nose Syndrome (Pseudogymnoascus destructans) what are the 4 main disease influencing factors and main effect
a. naïve population
b. Population density
c. Hibernation/resource availability is low in winter
d. Temperature - low in winter when cause most issue
CONSERVATION THREAT
Chytrid disease - Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis what species important for, what occurs, what are important factors with individual, population, environment effects
Chytrid disease - Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis treatment and main effect
Toxoplasmosis what is the definitive host, intermediate host and effects
Tasmanian devil facial tumour when does it first appear, effects and epidemiology
Tasmanian devil facial tumour what is the main effect and epidemiology
CONSERVATION THREAT
- Epidemiology
○ Affects generally more dominant and healthy animals as generally more aggressive so bite (transmission)
○ Decline in 80-90% in Tasmanian devils
§ Not total crash in the populations -> possible selective pressure resulting in evolution of the population to become more resistant
○ Frequency dependent disease
Sarcoptic mange what species important with, what leads to, prevention and the main concern
Beak-and feather disease (psittacine circovirus) what species found in, how spread, main effects
Human and livestock health what are the 3 main effects need to consider and describe a disease that effects this one health approach
1) animal health 2) human health 3) ecosystem health
Nipah virus
- South east asia -> people infected straight from pigs - pigs infected from flying foxes that drop half eaten fruit within the piggeries
- Why occur -> move into closer contact with pigs because
○ Habit loss, environmental diseases result in migration towards these areas
What are 3 important ecosystem effects that affect rate of emerging disease
Give an example of a disease where dilution effect from changes in biodiversity affects rates of emergence
lyme disease carried by a tick -> birds, possums, mice are hosts
□ Mice is the best at carrying the virus -> if have multiple species/hosts then tick go onto that and be eliminated
□ In fragmentated environments increase mice and decrease other species -> increase survival of tick and prevalence
What are 4 main differences in an aquatic environment
What are important structures in aquatic animals
What is important about poikilotherms and how do tuna and salmon deal with it, what temperature is stressed and why - what to do in this situation
Gills function, how achieve what are the 2 main parts of the gill and their structure and function
What are the 3 main types of ventilation with fish gills and the type of fish present within
1) Ram ventilation -> must keep their mouth open and kept moving to get water flowing over gills
○ EG - tuna
§ WHY DOESN’T IT HAVE BOTH -> buccal pump mechanism takes a lot of energy (why tuna doesn’t have) ALSO need space for this muscle so tuna just have bigger gills
2) Pump mechanism -> can sit still and pump water through gills
○ EG - goldfish
3) Combination of both depending on whether moving or not
○ EG - salmon
What leads to disease within a tank/ closed ecosystem
Ecosystem - has a bearing capacity -> temperature, salinitiy, plants, animals, micro-organisms
Added pressure - farming activities, unrelated water activies, land based activities, climate change can change the capacity
RUPTURE
- changes in biotic and abiotic parameters - induced changes in these parameters -> STRESS -> DISEASE
What are 7 common causes of added stresses on aquatic animals