Dick Carl W, Patterson Bruce D
Department of Zoology, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL 60605-2496, USA.
Int J Parasitol. 2007 Jul;37(8-9):871-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2007.02.004. Epub 2007 Feb 20.
Host specificity gauges the degree to which a parasite occurs in association with a single host species. The measure is indicative of properties of the host and parasite, as well as their ecological and co-evolutionary relationships. Host specificity is influenced by the behavior and ecology of both parasite and host. Where parasites are active, vagile and coupled with hosts whose behavior and ecology brings the parasite into contact with many potential hosts, the likelihood of host switching is increased, usually leading to lowered specificity. Bat flies are specialized, blood-feeding ectoparasites of bats worldwide. In the bat fly - bat system, numerous properties interrupt the linkage of parasite to host and should decrease specificity. For bat flies these include high levels of activity, proclivity to abandon a disturbed host, the ability to fly, and a life-history strategy that includes a pupal stage decoupled from the host. For bats these include rapid, frequent and wide-ranging flight, high species richness encouraging inter-specific encounters during foraging, roosting and reproductive events, the utilization of large, durable roosting structures that are often shared with other bat species, and utilization of common entrance/exit flyways. The biological and ecological characteristics of bats and flies should together facilitate interspecific host transfers and, over time, lead to non-specific host-parasite associations. Large surveys of Neotropical mammals and parasites, designed to eliminate artifactual host-to-host parasite transfers, unequivocally demonstrate the high host specificity of bat flies. High degrees of specificity are remarkable in light of myriad host and parasite characteristics that ought to break down such specificity. Although host-specific parasites often have limited dispersal capability, this is not the case for some groups, including active, mobile bat flies. Host specificity in parasites with high dispersal capability is likely related to adaptive constraints. Among these may be a reproductive filter selecting for specificity based on mate availability, and co-evolved immunocompatibility where parasites use the same or similar immune-signaling molecules as their hosts to avoid immunological surveillance and response.
宿主特异性衡量寄生虫与单一宿主物种相关联出现的程度。该指标反映了宿主和寄生虫的特性,以及它们的生态和共同进化关系。宿主特异性受到寄生虫和宿主双方行为及生态的影响。在寄生虫活跃、易移动且与行为和生态使寄生虫接触到许多潜在宿主的宿主相关联的情况下,宿主转换的可能性会增加,通常会导致特异性降低。蝙蝠蝇是全球蝙蝠特化的吸血外寄生虫。在蝙蝠蝇 - 蝙蝠系统中,众多特性打断了寄生虫与宿主的联系,理应会降低特异性。对于蝙蝠蝇而言,这些特性包括高度活跃、倾向于离开受干扰的宿主、飞行能力以及包括与宿主分离的蛹期的生活史策略。对于蝙蝠来说,这些特性包括快速、频繁且范围广泛的飞行、高物种丰富度促使在觅食、栖息和繁殖活动期间发生种间接触、利用通常与其他蝙蝠物种共享的大型持久栖息结构,以及利用共同的出入口飞行路线。蝙蝠和蝙蝠蝇的生物学及生态特征共同应会促进种间宿主转移,并随着时间推移导致非特异性宿主 - 寄生虫关联。旨在消除人为宿主间寄生虫转移的对新热带哺乳动物和寄生虫的大规模调查明确表明蝙蝠蝇具有高度的宿主特异性。鉴于众多本应打破这种特异性的宿主和寄生虫特征,高度的特异性十分显著。尽管宿主特异性寄生虫通常扩散能力有限,但包括活跃、可移动的蝙蝠蝇在内的一些类群并非如此。具有高扩散能力的寄生虫的宿主特异性可能与适应性限制有关。其中可能包括基于配偶可用性选择特异性的生殖筛选,以及共同进化的免疫相容性,即寄生虫使用与其宿主相同或相似的免疫信号分子来避免免疫监视和反应。