Skorping Arne, Jensen Knut Helge
Department of Biology, University of Bergen, Allégaten 41, N-5007 Bergen, Norway.
Trends Ecol Evol. 2004 May;19(5):219-20. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2004.02.006.
Some host individuals tend to acquire parasites at a much faster rate than do others--a consequence of heterogeneities in susceptibility and/or exposure. This is termed 'overdispersion' and, as for many other statistical phenomena, the degree of overdispersion often conforms to a 20/80 rule, where 20% of the host population is responsible for approximately 80% of the parasite transmission. But which are the hosts driving so much of the dynamics of an infectious disease? If host individuals at the tail of the frequency distribution can be identified by some common label, controlling parasitic diseases would be much easier. In two recent papers, Perkins et al. and Ferrari et al. have shown that male hosts are much more important than female hosts in the transmission of parasites.
一些宿主个体比其他个体更容易感染寄生虫,这是易感性和/或暴露程度存在差异的结果。这被称为“过度分散”,与许多其他统计现象一样,过度分散的程度通常符合20/80法则,即20%的宿主群体导致了约80%的寄生虫传播。但哪些宿主推动了传染病的大部分动态变化呢?如果频率分布尾部的宿主个体能够通过某种共同特征被识别出来,那么控制寄生虫病将会容易得多。在最近的两篇论文中,珀金斯等人和法拉利等人表明,在寄生虫传播中,雄性宿主比雌性宿主重要得多。