A unified evolutionary framework for understanding parasite infection
and host migratory behavior
Abstract
Animal migration impacts organismal health and disease transmission:
migrants are simultaneously exposed to parasites and able to reduce
infection at the population and individual levels. However, these
dynamics are difficult to study; empirical studies reveal disparate
results while existing theory makes assumptions that simplify natural
complexity. Here, we systematically review empirical studies of
migration and infection across taxa, highlighting key gaps in our
understanding. Next, we develop a unified evolutionary framework
incorporating different mechanisms of parasite-migration interactions
while accounting for ecological complexity that goes beyond previous
theory. Our framework generates diverse migration-infection patterns
paralleling those seen in empirical systems, including partial and
differential migration. Finally, we generate predictions about which
mechanisms dominate which empirical systems to guide future studies. Our
framework provides an overarching understanding of selective pressures
shaping migration patterns in the context of animal health and disease,
which is critical for predicting how environmental change may threaten
migration.