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Social Distancing Responses to Fungal Disease in an Australian Wild Lizard Population

Requena-Garcia, F.; Jackson, N.; Class, B.; Mitchell, A. C.; Cramp, R. C.; Frere, C. H.

2026-04-09 animal behavior and cognition
10.64898/2026.04.06.716608 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Social living often confers substantial fitness benefits; however, close spatial association among individuals can also elevate opportunities for pathogen transmission, especially where the populations are dense. Despite this, the extent to which avoidance behaviours are expressed by wild reptiles facing fungal disease remains unclear. We examined Eastern Water Dragons (EWDs; Intellagama lesueurii) in Roma Street Parklands, Brisbane, Australia, where a population is affected by the emerging fungal pathogen Nannizziopsis barbatae (Nb). Using a five-year dataset (2018-2023) spanning 146 individuals, we quantified social distance, as the minimum distance to the nearest neighbour, in relation to the number of diseased conspecifics that overlapped each individuals seasonal core home area. Social distance decreased as diseased conspecifics became more numerous, indicating a strong crowding effect; however, this reduction was weaker for diseased individuals, which maintained larger distances than healthy individuals even under high disease pressure. Together, these patterns support partial social avoidance consistent with behavioural changes in infected individuals, suggesting that infection risk constrains density-driven proximity. Our findings provide new insights into how disease pressure shapes social spacing in reptiles and contribute to a broader understanding of behavioural responses to emerging infectious fungal diseases.

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