Group Size and Nest Spacing Affect Buggy Creek Virus (Togaviridae: Alphavirus) Infection in Nestling House Sparrows

The transmission of parasites and pathogens among vertebrates often depends on host population size, host species diversity, and the extent of crowding among potential hosts, but little is known about how these variables apply to most vector-borne pathogens such as the arboviruses (arthropod-borne viruses). Buggy Creek virus (BCRV; Togaviridae: Alphavirus) is an RNA arbovirus transmitted by the swallow bug (Oeciacus vicarius) to the cliff swallow (Petrochelidon pyrrhonota) and the introduced house sparrow (Passer domesticus) that has recently invaded swallow nesting colonies. The virus has little impact on cliff swallows, but house sparrows are seriously affected by BCRV. For house sparrows occupying swallow nesting colonies in western Nebraska, USA, the prevalence of BCRV in nestling sparrows increased with sparrow colony size at a site but decreased with the number of cliff swallows present. If one nestling in a nest was infected with the virus, there was a greater likelihood that one or more of its nest-mates would also be infected than nestlings chosen at random. The closer a nest was to another nest containing infected nestlings, the greater the likelihood that some of the nestlings in the focal nest would be BCRV-positive. These results illustrate that BCRV represents a cost of coloniality for a vertebrate host (the house sparrow), perhaps the first such demonstration for an arbovirus, and that virus infection is spatially clustered within nests and within colonies. The decreased incidence of BCRV in sparrows as cliff swallows at a site increased reflects the “dilution effect,” in which virus transmission is reduced when a vector switches to feeding on a less competent vertebrate host.


Introduction
Two key variables in understanding the transmission of most parasites and pathogens are host population size and the extent of crowding among potential hosts. Numerous studies on directly transmitted parasites (especially ectoparasites) have shown increases in parasite prevalence with increases in vertebrate-host social group size [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8]. Many viral pathogens are known to require minimum population sizes of viable (susceptible) hosts in order to persist in a local area [9][10][11][12]. As the distance between vertebrate hosts decreases, transmission of macroparasites and some kinds of pathogens increases [8,10,13,14]. However, most of what we understand about the effects of population size and spacing on parasite or pathogen persistence comes from work on directly transmitted ectoparasites or viruses. Little is known about how vertebrate-host group size and spacing affects transmission of vector-borne pathogens [15,16]; in some of these, transmission may even be reduced in areas of high host density [7,17].
Most of the arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) parasitize multiple vertebrate host species. Their tendency to exploit various hosts makes analysis of the effect of host group size and spacing difficult for most of the vector-borne pathogens. Yet it is important to understand how transmission of arboviruses responds to vertebrate-host social environment: for example, recent work has suggested that prevalence of the medically important West Nile virus (Flaviviridae; Flavivirus) may decline in areas that contain high avian host diversity [18,19]. This may reflect the ''dilution effect,'' in which numerical increases in less competent amplifying hosts reduce virus transmission because many of the vectors feeding on these hosts fail to become infectious [20][21][22].
In other cases, increases in vertebrate host density and diversity may enhance arbovirus transmission either because (i) an abundant host enables vectors to persist even though that host itself may not be a competent amplifier of the virus [23][24][25]; (ii) crowding simply increases exposure to horizontally transmitted vectors and for that reason enhances the likelihood of pathogen transmission within a spatial cluster of vertebrate hosts [15,16,[26][27][28]; or (iii) the abundant hosts are more effective virus amplifiers and consequently more vectors may be infected locally [29][30][31][32]. Few data exist to evaluate these possibilities in most vector-host systems [22]. Information on how vector-borne pathogens such as arboviruses respond to vertebrate-host group size and spacing will also allow us to determine whether these pathogens can represent a cost of sociality in the same way as ectoparasites and directly transmitted microparasites; to date, this is largely unknown. If fitness of more social hosts is reduced by arboviruses, this adds to the suite of parasite-related costs that may constrain vertebrate social evolution in some situations [3,8,33,34].
In this study we take advantage of a relatively simple vectorborne virus/avian host system to explore how group size and spacing of different hosts potentially affects the likelihood of virus infection. We examine evidence for the dilution effect when two different vertebrate host species are present, and use the results to determine whether this arbovirus potentially represents a cost of coloniality for the hosts depending on which species of host is present. Our work is on Buggy Creek virus (BCRV; Togaviridae, Alphavirus), an arbovirus in the western equine encephalomyelitis virus complex [35][36][37]. BCRV is transmitted by a swallow bug (Hemiptera: Cimicidae: Oeciacus vicarius) to its principal avian hosts, the cliff swallow (Petrochelidon pyrrhonota) and the introduced house sparrow (Passer domesticus). This virus appears to have little effect on cliff swallows [32], but nestling house sparrows are competent amplifying hosts and exhibit severe pathology related to virus infection [38]. Our analyses here focus on house sparrows and how sparrow colony size and nest spacing potentially affect BCRV prevalence in nestling sparrows, although we also analyze how the presence of cliff swallows may influence the likelihood of virus infection in sparrows. Specifically, we ask whether BCRV prevalence at a bird colony site varies with the number of house sparrows and/or cliff swallows present and for sparrows, how spatial proximity of a nest with infected nestlings affects the likelihood of other nests also having birds positive for BCRV.

Ethics Statement
All handling of animals and procedures done were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Tulsa, under approval number TU-0036.

Study Organisms
House sparrows were introduced repeatedly into North America beginning in the 1850s [39] and are now widely distributed and found mainly in peridomestic settings. Sparrows are semi-colonial, often forming aggregations of 2 to 20 nests in close proximity. They are sedentary, remaining at or near breeding sites year-round [40]. House sparrows are multi-brooded, with nesting in our study area beginning in late April and ending in late July, with peak egg laying periods in mid May, late June, and late July. New broods are started soon after earlier ones fail or fledge, and numbers of breeding pairs at a site decline as the summer progresses. Mean (6 SE) clutch size for sparrows at latitudes similar to our study area is 4.6-4.8 (60.8) eggs, and nestlings fledge at 14-17 days of age [40].
Cliff swallows are highly colonial, migratory passerines that breed across much of western North America [41]. They build gourd-shaped mud nests on the sides of cliff faces, inside highway and railroad culverts, and underneath bridges. Nests can be closely spaced, often in direct contact with a contiguous nest. Colonies may contain up to 6000 active nests. The mud nests persist from year-to-year and are frequently repaired and reused by cliff swallows for multiple seasons [42]. Swallows arrive in our study area in early to mid May and typically raise a single brood, with most nestlings fledging by mid July. Individual colonies are highly synchronous and are quickly vacated by swallows after the nestlings fledge. Nestlings are in the nest for about 26 days before fledging [41].
Occupation of cliff swallow nests by house sparrows was thought to be the major reason why cliff swallow populations markedly declined in the eastern United States in the early 20 th century [43]. House sparrows likely began to use cliff swallow colonies in our study area after the construction of the interstate highway system in the late 1960's, which provided substrates (bridges, culverts) for cliff swallows to form colonies near humans and thus brought cliff swallows into close contact with house sparrows. Sparrows evict cliff swallows from their mud nests or occupy abandoned nests in colonies where cliff swallows are either present or absent. They fill the nests with grass, feathers, and other materials (making it easy to distinguish a house sparrow nest from a cliff swallow nest in the field) and will breed in them until the nests fall from the substrate.
The swallow bug is a hematophagous nest-based ectoparasite primarily of the cliff swallow. Density of bugs in cliff swallow colonies can be quite high, with as many as 2600 bugs per cliff swallow nest [42]. Swallow bugs are long-lived and can survive without a blood meal for up to three years [44,45]. The bugs also parasitize house sparrows nesting in cliff swallow nests, and in this way transmit BCRV to them. Bugs feed on birds mostly at night.
Buggy Creek virus is a single-stranded, positive-sense RNA alphavirus [46]. Fort Morgan virus [47], also found in swallow bugs, is a strain of BCRV [37,48], as probably is a newly described swallow bug virus called Stone Lakes virus [49]. BCRV is ecologically distinct from most alphaviruses in that its vector is the swallow bug, rather than a mosquito [46,[50][51][52]. The virus occurs in two separate lineages [37,48] that show distinct ecological differences [53]. Prevalence of BCRV in swallow bugs averages ,25% of bug pools over the whole study area and across different years [15,54,55].

Study Area
Our study area is a 60 6 200 km area largely contiguous with the North and South Platte rivers in western Nebraska, USA, and is centered at the Cedar Point Biological Station (41u139N, 101u399W), in Keith County. It also includes portions of Lincoln, Garden, Duel, and Morrill counties. Each year we monitor approximately 170 cliff swallow colony sites, which are occupied to varying degrees by only cliff swallows, cliff swallows and house sparrows together, or only house sparrows. The study area is described in detail by Brown and Brown [42]. We studied house sparrows at colonies in concrete culverts beneath highways or railroads and on the sides of bridges.

Field Sampling
In May-July 2007, we systematically blood-sampled nestling house sparrows from 21 colony sites throughout the study area. These colonies were chosen both because they contained sparrows and because they were situated in highway culverts where nests could be relatively easily accessed. House sparrow nests were examined for the presence of eggs using a dental mirror and flashlight to see inside the nests. Nests containing eggs were numbered and visited every 2-4 days to determine hatching date and nestling age. We sampled all nestlings in a nest when feasible. Nestlings were between 4-17 days of age when sampled for virus, with all birds bled either once or twice during the nesting period by jugular venipuncture with a 29 gauge insulin syringe. Upon collection, 0.1 mL of blood was placed in 0.4 mL of BA-1 virus diluent [55]. Sampled nestlings were banded with U.S. Geological survey bands and returned to the nest. Blood samples were stored on wet ice in the field, returned to the laboratory, clarified by centrifugation, supernatant removed, and stored at 270uC until screened for virus.
We collected swallow bugs for virus testing by brushing bugs off the exterior of cliff swallow nests into a wide-mouthed collecting jar. Bugs were put into plastic bags and sorted into pools of 100 while alive and stored at 270uC until processed [52,55]. Because bugs cannot be found in large numbers on the outside of house sparrow nests [32], we collected bugs for this study only from cliff swallow nests.
For each colony site where we blood-sampled house sparrows, we noted whether cliff swallows were present or absent, and recorded cliff swallow colony size (number of active cliff swallow nests) using methods described earlier [42]. House sparrow colony size was defined as the maximum number of simultaneously active nests at any time within the season. At the end of the house sparrow breeding season, we measured the distance (m) between active house sparrow nests and between active house sparrow and active cliff swallow nests in all colonies that were sampled more than once during the season. Distances between colonies were measured using a GPS handheld unit (Garmin International, Inc., Olathe, Kansas). In analyses, the distance to the nearest BCRVpositive house sparrow nest was calculated using the nearest sampled nest that had contained a BCRV-positive house sparrow nestling concurrent with or prior to virus sampling of the focal nest.

Laboratory Analyses
Viral RNA was extracted from bird sera by first adding 25 mL of thawed sera in BA-1 diluent to 100 mL of a guanidine thiocyanatebased lysis buffer [56]. Bug pools were processed as described in Brown et al. [52]. After the addition of 400 mL of 100% ethanol to the sera or bug-pool homogenate, RNA was extracted using the QIAmp Viral RNA Mini Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, California, USA), following the manufacturer's protocol. A positive BCRV control (derived from swallow bugs) was included in each extraction, and negative controls were placed between every 5 samples. RT-PCR was performed on samples using the OneStep RT-PCR Kit (Qiagen), following the manufacturer's protocol. We used BCRVspecific primers that yielded a 208-bp fragment from the E2 region of the viral genome, as described in Moore et al. [55]. Electrophoresis of product (6.5 mL) on a 4% Nusieve/agarose gel was used to identify any positive samples, using at least one BCRV positive control on each gel and a 100-bp ladder. See Moore et al. [55] for additional details on the RT-PCR methods.
Samples that were initially BCRV-positive by RT-PCR were subjected to plaque assay on Vero cells, as described in Huyvaert et al. [57]. Samples that did not confirm by exhibiting plaque formation on Vero cells were subjected to re-extraction and RT-PCR to confirm presence of viral RNA in the sample [55]. A house sparrow blood sample or bug pool was considered BCRVpositive if either it was RT-PCR-positive on initial screening and confirmed by plaque assay, or it was RT-PCR-positive on initial screening, negative by plaque assay, and positive by RT-PCR on second screening [32,53]. Some birds were sampled on multiple days during the nestling period: in analyzing prevalence, a bird that tested positive upon first sampling was considered positive for the rest of its nestling period (because presumably an infected bird if surviving cannot become re-infected over such a short period), whereas individuals that were initially negative were also used in calculating prevalence when sampled subsequently (because a negative status can change with time).

Statistical Analyses
Analyses by colony. We used the percentage of nests that were BCRV-positive (defined as $ 1 BCRV-positive nestling in the nest at any time) in a colony as the measure of infection at the site over the course of the summer. For these analyses, all nests at each colony site were collapsed into a single data point describing colony-wide prevalence.
Analyses by nest. To determine whether nests that contained one BCRV-positive nestling were more likely to contain additional positive nestlings than a nest selected at random, we first calculated the overall percentage of nestlings that were positive (22.2%) from all nests with brood sizes 2-6 (n = 853 nestlings). Using this percentage, we generated the expected number of positive and negative nest-mates in the subset of BCRV-positive nests, assuming that positive nest-mates were distributed among these nests in the same proportion as in the total population. The observed number of positive and negative nest-mates in these nests was compared with the expected number using a chi-squared test.
We constructed a set of a priori models with nest as the metric using several ecological factors (Table 1) that may have had an effect on the likelihood of infection ($ 1 BCRV-infected nestling in a nest). We used logistic regression to determine maximum likelihood estimates for each candidate model (PROC LOGISTIC [58]). For the dependent (response) variable, the outcome could be either 0 (BCRV-negative nest) or 1 (BCRV-positive nest). Due to the range of the spatial data and distance-related outliers, potential predictors that used nearest-neighbor distance as a metric (nearest active cliff swallow nest [NNC], nearest active house sparrow nest [NNH], and nearest active BCRV-positive house sparrow nest [NNHP]) were rank-transformed in SAS prior to logistic regression. To test for multicollinearity in predictor variables, we calculated the variance inflation factor for each continuous predictor in the analysis using SAS (PROC REG with options VIF TOL). Models showing overdispersion (Hosmer-Lemeshow test, x 2 .df; [59]) were not considered in further analysis. We used Akaike's information criterion corrected for small sample size (AIC c ) to determine the best fitting of our remaining candidate models. The AIC minimizes loss of information in the data by relating the maximum likelihood to the number of parameters in the model [60]. Weight of evidence for each model was determined by normalizing relative likelihood values generated by AIC c using computed Akaike weights (w i ) for all candidate models. We included only models with an Akaike weight within 10% of the highest weight in our confidence set of models [61]. We used the confidence set of models to compute model-averaged parameter estimates for each predictor variable, using the Akaike weights [60].
We interpreted effect size and direction in individual predictors using the values of model-averaged partial regression coefficients (b) and their respective 95% confidence intervals and their logodds ratios (e b ). We examined the shape of the predicted probabilities of the continuous variables which showed a likelihood of an effect on the response variable (those where the 95% CI did not include zero) by holding all other parameters constant at their mean and varying the focal parameter using the multiple logistic regression equation [62].

Effects of Colony Size and Avian Host Species
The percentage of house sparrow nests with $ 1 nestling infected with BCRV increased with the size of the house sparrow colony at a site ( Figure 1). Sparrow colony size was inversely correlated with nest spacing and with average distance to the nearest infected nest within a colony: the mean distance between nests in a colony decreased as colony size increased (n = 14 colonies; r s = 20.89, p,0.0001), and the mean distance from a focal nest to the nearest one that contained (or had earlier that season contained) a BCRV-positive nestling decreased as colony size increased (r s = 20.75, p = 0.002). There was an inverse relationship between the percentage of BCRV-positive house sparrow nests in a colony and a nest's mean distance from the nearest house sparrow nest (r s = 20.79, p = 0.0008) and from the nearest nest that contained or had contained a BCRV-positive nestling (r s = 20.87, p,0.0001).
Virus prevalence in house sparrow colonies was inversely correlated with cliff swallow colony size ( Figure 2). Cliff swallow colony size and house sparrow colony size were not correlated (n = 14; r s = 20.37, p = 0.19), so the strong difference between the species (Figure 1 vs. Figure 2) could not simply reflect co-variation between house sparrow and cliff swallow colony size.
The percentage of BCRV-positive swallow bug pools (collected from bugs on active cliff swallow nests) in a colony containing both cliff swallow and house sparrow nests was directly correlated with the percentage of BCRV-positive house sparrow nests in that colony ( Figure 3). Thus, nests with one BCRVpositive nestling were more likely to have positive nest-mates, and less likely to have negative nest-mates, than nests drawn at random. This meant that infection among the nestlings within a nest was not independent, and required that we use the nest (not nestling) as our unit of analysis.   Infection prevalence. Analysis of infection prevalence by nest used data from 181 nests where $ 1 nestling was tested for BCRV. Tests for multicollinearity on continuous predictor variables revealed minimal overdispersion in the data (VIF,2.0), so no corrections were made. Candidate models without an age, date, and brood-size effect were typically overdispersed (Hosmer and Lemeshow test; x 2 .df) and ranked well below the models that contained these three parameters. We therefore included age, date, and brood-size variables in all model development. Our confidence set (n = 4) of models (Table 2) all included an effect of distance from the nearest BCRV-positive house sparrow nest (NNHP) and an age*date interaction. The highest ranking model showed moderate weight of evidence (w i = 0.4693), with the second-ranked model 1.66 less likely to best fit the data. Models without either NNHP or an age*date interaction performed poorly (w i ,10%) and were not included in the confidence set of models ( Table 2).

Effects of Nest Spacing
Examination of model-averaged parameter estimates derived from the confidence set of models contained two parameters with likely effects on the response variable when partialed, as indicated by a 95% CI that did not include zero ( Table 3). The odds of a house sparrow nest becoming BCRV-positive decreased by 3% with each unit increase in distance from a nest which had contained a BCRV-positive nestling (NNHP; e b = 0.972). The shape of predicted probabilities with an effect of NNHP showed a steep decline in likelihood of becoming infected with only moderate distance from an infected nest (Figure 4), with the probability of infection below 30% for nests in colonies where the closest infected nest was in another colony ( Figure 4). The age*date interaction was likely due to a clustering of young nestlings sampled during periods that coincided with highest house sparrow nesting activity in the study area. The effect of the interaction on the outcome variable was low (b = 0.0095, 6 SE 0.0035).

Discussion
Our analyses indicate that virus infection of nestling house sparrows was strongly affected by colony size, which host species (house sparrow, cliff swallow) were present at a site, and by nest spacing within a colony. Sparrows were more likely to be infected with BCRV in colonies with larger numbers of active sparrow nests but less likely to be infected at sites with large cliff swallow colonies. The closer a nest was to another nest with infected nestlings, the more likely the nest was to also have infected nestlings, and if one nestling in a nest was infected, there was a greater likelihood that its nest-mates were also infected. The results are a rare illustration of spatial clustering in infection by an arbovirus, and also reveal that the increased risk of virus exposure for sparrows in larger colonies likely represents a cost of coloniality for this species.

Group Size and the Dilution Effect
To our knowledge there are no previous data for arboviruses showing that per-capita incidence of infection in vertebrate hosts   increases with host group size. We earlier reported an increase in infection of swallow bug vectors with BCRV in larger cliff swallow colonies [15] but without information on host infection. The effect of sparrow colony size on virus prevalence in nestling sparrows (Figure 1) probably reflects a higher prevalence of BCRV in bugs at sites with more sparrows, likely driven mostly by the competence of nestling sparrows as hosts for this virus [32].
Because nestling sparrows of all ages can amplify BCRV to titers high enough to infect swallow bugs [63], as more sparrows are present at a site, more virus is amplified and more bugs are infected. In addition, as the number of sparrow nests at a site increases, the availability of blood meals for bugs also increases and promotes bug survival even in the absence of cliff swallows [53,64]. House sparrows are present at cliff swallow colony sites in our study area to varying degrees throughout the year and raise broods from April to August; in contrast, cliff swallows are in residence at any one site for generally no longer than 8-10 weeks during the summer. Sparrows thus potentially provide a longer period of time during which bugs can feed, become infected, and reproduce, leading to more BCRV infection in bugs and higher bug populations at sites with large numbers of sparrows. Consequently, BCRV may be more likely to persist in the vectors at such sites and more likely to be transmitted to nestling sparrows by bugs. Consistent with this, we found a strong positive relationship between BCRV detected in bug pools (collected from cliff swallow nests) at a site and virus prevalence in nestling sparrows from the same site ( Figure 3). In this particular vectorborne system, the horizontal transmission of virus to the avian hosts may mirror the horizontal transmission of bugs among those hosts.
The decline in BCRV prevalence in nestling sparrows both (i) at sites with cliff swallows, compared to sites with only house sparrows [32], and (ii) as the number of active cliff swallow nests at a site increased (Figure 2), illustrates the dilution effect. As a second vertebrate host is added to the system (in this case, into the bird colony sites), overall virus prevalence in sparrows declines. Two factors likely contribute to this phenomenon: (1) virus amplification decreases because cliff swallows are poor amplifying hosts, rarely showing viremia [32], and (2) the bugs switch their feeding from house sparrows to cliff swallows when the latter are available, thereby reducing the frequency of BCRV transmission to sparrows. The dilution effect as originally conceived [20][21][22] describes situations like this one where a less competent vertebrate host reduces virus transmission by virtue of the vector feeding on it instead of a more competent host. Although there are several clear cases of the dilution effect operating with directly transmitted parasites or pathogens [20,21,[65][66][67], the BCRV example with house sparrows and cliff swallows is one of the few empirical demonstrations of the dilution effect in arboviruses (see Hess and Hayes [20] for an example with malaria).
Even though the increase in BCRV with sparrow colony size, and the decrease with swallow colony size, were statistically strong patterns (Figs. 1, 2), there was between-site variability. Notably, the largest house sparrow colony studied had almost no virus, and this site also had no cliff swallows until mid-way through the summer (14 June). The single house sparrow nestling that was BCRV-positive in this colony was found only after cliff swallows had colonized the site. Other factors may also influence BCRV prevalence at a given site. A strong predictor of virus prevalence in bugs is the extent to which transient cliff swallows pass through a colony site [54] and introduce infected bugs, and therefore the degree to which a colony site is physically isolated from other colonies (reducing the number of transient birds finding it) may affect observed BCRV prevalence. The large sparrow colony that had little virus was relatively isolated from other active cliff swallow colonies (the two closest were 10.4 and 13.2 km away), in contrast to all other study colonies that were within 5 km of one or more sites containing cliff swallows.
Despite this single uninfected colony, it generally appears that large house sparrow colonies (particularly those with fewer cliff swallows present) with high BCRV prevalence are disadvantageous to sparrows, given the severe effects of this virus on nestlings [38,63]. Sparrows in larger colonies thus should have lower fitness on average than ones nesting in small groups or solitarily, or those in more isolated areas. The deleterious effects of BCRV on nestling house sparrows [38] would seem sufficient to produce a net cost to coloniality in this species, especially given that there are no known social benefits of group-living (e.g., food-finding, avoidance of predators) for house sparrows [39,40,68,69]. Because of frequent annual turnover among the sparrows occupying cliff swallow colony sites, and the high mortality of BCRV-infected nestlings in our study area [63], it is unlikely that the house sparrow population at most sites develops any degree of herd immunity to BCRV that might ameliorate the virus's severe effects on sparrows. Increasing prevalence of BCRV as colony size increases could be one factor constraining the size of house sparrow colonies at cliff swallow sites.

Clustering of Virus Infection
We found evidence of non-independence in BCRV infection among the nestlings within a nest, as did Scott et al. [70] for the Fort Morgan strain of BCRV. This is perhaps not surprising if infected bugs remain largely within the same nest as long as nestlings are present, taking repeated blood meals (required each time a bug molts into one of the five instar stages; [71]) from the nestlings present. Contagion of infection among nest-mates is also consistent with direct virus transmission between nestlings in a nest, perhaps through contact with feces or saliva [72]. Some experimental evidence indicates that BCRV can be transmitted directly among house sparrows that share the same cage in the laboratory [57], but further work is needed to determine if this actually occurs in the field.
Logistic regression revealed that the best predictor of whether at least one of the nestling sparrows in a nest would be positive for BCRV was the nearness of another house sparrow nest that either currently had an infected nestling or had earlier had one. This indicates a surprisingly high degree of spatial clustering of virus, especially for one with an arthropod vector. The mechanisms that lead to this clustering are unknown, but could include (i) infected bugs moving along the nesting substrate between nests that are relatively close together within a colony, and (ii) adult house sparrows moving infected bugs attached to their legs, feet, or feathers [42,73] from one nest to a nearby nest. Sparrows attempt multiple broods per summer, often using the same nest repeatedly and when using another, settling near their previous nest [40; C. Brown, pers. obs.]. Thus, if they introduce infected bugs to other nests, they would likely do so to nests close by. Having marked birds and monitoring which old swallow nests sparrows choose for successive nesting attempts would help resolve this. Bugs are also capable of moving long distances along the substrate, with one paint-marked bug having moved 65 m within a colony over a 3day period [42]. Bug movement along the substrate is initiated as soon as the nestlings in a nest fledge or the nest fails [C. Brown and V. O'Brien, pers. obs.]. The high mortality suffered by house sparrow nestlings infected with BCRV [38,63], combined with the lack of independence of infection within nests, could lead to increased nest failure and thus increased bug movement to nests near those that have failed. This may serve to cluster infected bugs among close neighboring nests.
The spatial clustering of virus-positive nests within the colony means that there is extensive heterogeneity in BCRV infection at a given colony site. Although it is unclear what initially generates this spatial variability, i.e., what seeds virus at a site to start with and why at a particular location within the colony, the consequence is that house sparrows have different fitness expectations depending on where they happen to settle in a colony. This leads to considerable variation within a colony in an individual's expected payoff, and underscores that analyses of the costs and benefits of different group sizes based strictly on colonywide averages can sometimes be misleading [3,74].
Compared to most arboviruses, BCRV is unusual in that it is transmitted horizontally by a swallow bug vector rather than a mosquito. However, some mosquitoes can be attracted to larger host colonies [75], and thus even viruses transmitted by mosquitoes might have increased prevalence in larger host groups [76]. That mosquito-associated arboviruses could respond like BCRV to host spacing is suggested by our finding spatial clusters of nestling house sparrows infected with West Nile virus at cliff swallow colony sites [72]. The ecology of BCRV in many ways resembles that of the California group bunyaviruses [77] and some of the tick-borne flaviviruses [78] that maintain relatively stable occurrence in time and space. These arboviruses may exhibit the same responses to vertebrate-host group size and density as we documented here for BCRV.