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Figure 1.

Schematic of the plague cycle with small mammals as hosts and fleas as vectors.

Arrows represent connections affected by climate with a color-coding depending on the most influential climate variable on this link (i.e., precipitation, temperatures, and other variables indirectly depending on them such as soil characteristics and soil moisture). Grey rectangles somewhat arbitrarily delimit epizootic, enzootic, and zoonotic cycles. Note that despite their location at the far end of the cycle, humans often provide the only available information on plague dynamics.

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Figure 2.

Illustration of the abiotic environment impact on the plague cycle as a function of spatial scale.

Arrows represent connections affected by climate (see Figure 1 for the meaning of color coding). Most climate variables act over a wide range of scales and only the effects we deemed most important are represented. At the level of individuals, populations and communities hosts and vectors are influenced by climate variability at the relevant scale (local or regional). At the smaller scale, the burrow acts as a filter on climate variables. Note that secondary hosts are placed at the kilometer and larger scale on the basis of the type of information generally available regarding their infection.

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