Wright Amber N, Gompper Matthew E
Center for Population Biology, University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Oecologia. 2005 Jun;144(1):148-56. doi: 10.1007/s00442-005-0018-3. Epub 2005 May 11.
The role that host aggregation plays in structuring parasite assemblages was examined by experimentally increasing the contact rates of raccoons, Procyon lotor. Two populations of raccoons in southern New York were monitored for 2 years to determine baseline levels of host interaction and to identify the parasite assemblage. In the third year of the study, one population was provisioned with the addition of clumped food resources, while the other was provisioned with equal quantities of dispersed food resources. Remote photography showed that raccoons aggregated at clumped resources but not at dispersed resources, and therefore contact rates between individuals were higher in the site with clumped resources. There were no differences in parasitism between the sites prior to resource augmentation. Among ectoparasites, there were no significant changes in the prevalence or abundance of any species in response to the perturbation. In contrast, across the endoparasite assemblage within and across hosts, the prevalence of infection increased as a result of increased host contact. Strong increases in the prevalence of a few directly transmitted species and slight increases among most species lead to increased evenness in parasite prevalence, suggesting that parasites in this system are transmission limited. In addition, the number of parasite species per host (the parasite infracommunity) was higher in the clumped-resource population. These endoparasite results suggest that intraspecific variation in the species richness of parasite communities of individual hosts, and the prevalence of parasitic species in host populations as assessed across entire parasitic assemblages, is robustly influenced by intraspecific variation in the degree of host contact. Further, these results suggest that anthropogenic changes which alter resource availability may have important consequences for disease transmission in wildlife.
通过实验性地提高浣熊(北美浣熊)的接触率,研究了宿主聚集在构建寄生虫群落中所起的作用。对纽约州南部的两个浣熊种群进行了为期两年的监测,以确定宿主相互作用的基线水平并识别寄生虫群落。在研究的第三年,给其中一个种群提供了集中的食物资源,而给另一个种群提供了等量的分散食物资源。远程摄影显示,浣熊聚集在集中的资源处,而不是分散的资源处,因此在有集中资源的地点,个体之间的接触率更高。在资源增加之前,两个地点的寄生虫感染情况没有差异。在外寄生虫中,任何物种的患病率或丰度都没有因这种扰动而发生显著变化。相比之下,在宿主内部和宿主之间的内寄生虫群落中,由于宿主接触增加,感染率上升。少数直接传播物种的患病率大幅上升,大多数物种略有上升,导致寄生虫患病率的均匀度增加,这表明该系统中的寄生虫受传播限制。此外,在有集中资源的种群中,每个宿主的寄生虫物种数量(寄生虫小群落)更高。这些内寄生虫结果表明,个体宿主寄生虫群落物种丰富度的种内变异,以及在整个寄生虫群落中评估的宿主种群中寄生虫物种的患病率,受到宿主接触程度种内变异的强烈影响。此外,这些结果表明,改变资源可用性的人为变化可能对野生动物疾病传播产生重要影响。