To explain patterns between anthropogenic loss of species diversity and the rise in the number of novel zoonotic diseases, the "dilution effect" hypothesis predicts that with lower species diversity, infection risk will increase. The underlying mechanisms have been largely investigated in systems where pathogen transmission is vector-borne or environmental. Relatively less research has been conducted in systems where transmission is direct, such as with orthohantaviruses (hereafter hantaviruses) and their rodent reservoir hosts. These systems are commonly cited as supporting a negative diversity-disease pattern. To motivate empirical research on underlying mechanisms driving this pattern, we extend a mechanistic framework that links species diversity and infection prevalence of directly transmitted zoonotic pathogens by using rodent-hantavirus systems in the Americas as models. Additionally, we summarize empirical studies, synthesize mechanistic evidence, and identify knowledge gaps. Our findings suggest that host regulation is a key mechanism likely to drive diversity-disease patterns in rodent-hantavirus systems of the Americas. Other mechanisms have received less empirical support but also less attention. Although host regulation likely functions via density-dependent transmission, and can thus change contact rates among hosts, consequences to other mechanisms have been neglected. As observed in rodent-hantavirus systems in the Americas, we propose that for a negative diversity-disease pattern to manifest, the primary reservoir host species should be resilient to anthropogenic disturbance but also vulnerable to competition, predation, or both, and the "diversity" measure should be associated with host density.
Keywords: community composition; density‐dependent transmission; emerging infectious diseases; population regulation; rodent‐borne zoonoses; species diversity.
© 2025 The Author(s). Ecology and Evolution published by British Ecological Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.