Department of Environmental Studies, Emory University, Atlanta GA 30322, USA.
Front Zool. 2010 Jan 21;7:3. doi: 10.1186/1742-9994-7-3.
The foraging behavior of blood-sucking arthropods is the defining biological event shaping the transmission cycle of vector-borne parasites. It is also a phenomenon that pertains to the realm of community ecology, since blood-feeding patterns of vectors can occur across a community of vertebrate hosts. Although great advances in knowledge of the genetic basis for blood-feeding choices have been reported for selected vector species, little is known about the role of community composition of vertebrate hosts in determining such patterns.
METHODS & RESULTS: Here, we present an analysis of feeding patterns of vectors across a variety of locations, looking at foraging patterns of communities of mosquitoes, across communities of hosts primarily comprised of mammals and birds. Using null models of species co-occurrence, which do not require ancillary information about host abundance, we found that blood-feeding patterns were aggregated in studies from multiple sites, but random in studies from a single site. This combination of results supports the idea that mosquito species in a community may rely primarily on host availability in a given landscape, and that contacts with specific hosts will be influenced more by the presence/absence of hosts than by innate mosquito choices. This observation stresses the importance of blood-feeding plasticity as a key trait explaining the emergence of many zoonotic mosquito transmitted diseases.
From an epidemiological perspective our observations support the idea that phenomena promoting synchronization of vectors and hosts can promote the emergence of vector-borne zoonotic diseases, as suggested by observations on the linkages between deforestation and the emergence of several human diseases.
吸血节肢动物的觅食行为是塑造病媒寄生虫传播周期的决定性生物学事件。这也是一个涉及群落生态学的现象,因为病媒的吸血模式可以发生在脊椎动物宿主群落中。尽管已经报道了一些选定的病媒物种在血液选择的遗传基础方面取得了巨大的进展,但对于脊椎动物宿主群落组成在确定这种模式中的作用知之甚少。
在这里,我们分析了不同地点的病媒的觅食模式,观察了主要由哺乳动物和鸟类组成的宿主群落中蚊子的觅食模式。我们使用不依赖宿主丰度辅助信息的物种共存零模型,发现血液觅食模式在来自多个地点的研究中是聚集的,但在来自单个地点的研究中是随机的。这一组合结果支持了这样一种观点,即群落中的蚊子物种可能主要依赖于特定景观中的宿主可用性,并且与特定宿主的接触将更多地受到宿主存在/缺失的影响,而不是由蚊子的固有选择决定。这一观察强调了血液觅食可塑性作为一个关键特征的重要性,它可以解释许多人畜共患蚊媒传播疾病的出现。
从流行病学的角度来看,我们的观察结果支持这样一种观点,即促进病媒和宿主同步的现象可以促进病媒传播的人畜共患病的出现,正如森林砍伐与几种人类疾病之间的联系所表明的那样。