2023
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13903
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Disgust in animals and the application of disease avoidance to wildlife management and conservation

Abstract: Disgust is an adaptive system hypothesized to have evolved to reduce the risk of becoming sick. It is associated with behavioural, cognitive and physiological responses tuned to allow animals to avoid and/or get rid of parasites, pathogens and toxins. Little is known about the mechanisms and outcomes of disease avoidance in wild animals. Furthermore, given the escalation of negative human‐wildlife interactions, the translation of such knowledge into the design of evolutionarily relevant conservation and wildli… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 229 publications
(273 reference statements)
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“…We therefore cannot point to an effective chemical to use with mesopredators in general or for a specific species, thus highlighting the need for more research on the subject. Nevertheless, CTA is promoted as a relevant tool to manage endangered species rehabilitation, pest or invasive species, crop‐raiding, and animal tourism (Sarabian et al 2023). Snijders et al (2021) offer guidelines in implementing a CTA program.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We therefore cannot point to an effective chemical to use with mesopredators in general or for a specific species, thus highlighting the need for more research on the subject. Nevertheless, CTA is promoted as a relevant tool to manage endangered species rehabilitation, pest or invasive species, crop‐raiding, and animal tourism (Sarabian et al 2023). Snijders et al (2021) offer guidelines in implementing a CTA program.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Instead, ethical considerations should push researchers to develop their research protocols in view of limiting their impact on wild animals, while still extracting as much information as they can at one time, to avoid the need to re‐expose animals indefinitely. Crucially, the methods presented in this Special Feature will all facilitate this, be it by automatizing feeders (Harrison et al, 2023; Wild et al, 2022), or by making extensive use of remote sensing (He et al, 2022; King & Jensen, 2022; Mannion et al, 2022; Sarabian et al, 2023) thus showing that the study of sociality in the wild is not incompatible with the use of contemporary methods. In fact, such methods should be tested to explore the limits of their use on different species and produce reasonable do‐or‐do not guidelines that can guide the design and implementation of future research.…”
Section: Ethical Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While their results do not allow them to make firm conclusions regarding this question in their study groups, they provide the tools to do so across species. Crucially, these tools may also allow investigation of how much of the diet of these wild animals is impacted by humans themselves: in a nutshell, the future might tell us how much our wild subjects have remained wild in their foods, despite being confronted with increasingly encroaching humans (Gruber et al, 2019;McLennan & Hockings, 2014). Gräßle et al ( 2023) take a radically different approach and also tackle the 'ecological validity' of their wild subjects, but this time, by looking at their brains.…”
Section: How To S Tay In the D Irt ?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Investigating the genetic and environmental factors that contribute to within-population variation in avoidance behaviours is important to understand its ecological and evolutionary consequences [2,16,17]. For instance, foraging and feeding are essential components of host ecology and are crucial for organismal reproduction and fitness, but they also provide a major route of pathogen transmission [18][19][20][21][22]. Characterising variability in host behaviours that contribute to individual heterogeneity in pathogen acquisition and spread is therefore a major focus of disease ecology and epidemiology [17,18,[23][24][25].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, foraging and feeding are essential components of host ecology and are crucial for organismal reproduction and fitness, but they also provide a major route of pathogen transmission [18][19][20][21][22]. Characterising variability in host behaviours that contribute to individual heterogeneity in pathogen acquisition and spread is therefore a major focus of disease ecology and epidemiology [17,18,[23][24][25].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%