Institute of Parasitology, Biology Centre of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Branišovská 31, 370 05 České Budějovice, Czech Republic.
Int J Parasitol. 2011 Aug 1;41(9):981-90. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2011.05.005. Epub 2011 Jun 15.
High recruitment rates of multiple species and hierarchical competition are the keys to a competitive exclusion model of community assembly in larval trematode communities in molluscs. Eutrophic environments provide conditions for accelerating trematode transmission and this would increase the strength of interspecific interactions. To test these predictions, we provide the first known assessment for a pulmonate snail host, and for highly productive aquatic environments, of the rates of colonisation and extinction at the level of individual snail host patches, of a large guild of trematode species. Using a uniquely large dataset from a relatively long-term mark-recapture study of Lymnaea stagnalis in six eutrophic fishponds in central Europe, we demonstrate extraordinarily rapid colonisation by trematodes of a snail host, thus meeting the assumptions of the competitive exclusion model. Overall annual colonisation rates ranged from 243% to 503% year(-1) so that the odds of trematode establishment in an individual snail in these ponds are two to five times per year. Extinction rates were substantially lower than colonisation rates and, therefore, would not result in turnover rates high enough to significantly affect prevalence patterns in the snail populations. At the species level, analyses of sample-based estimates of probabilities of colonisation revealed that shared species traits associated with transmission and competitive abilities determined the limits of colonisation abilities. Colonisation rates were exceedingly high for the species transmitted to the snails passively via eggs. There was a significant effect of species competitive abilities on colonisation rates due to subordinate species being substantially better colonisers than both strong and weak dominants, a pattern consistent with the predictions of the competition-colonisation trade-off hypothesis. Our results suggest that, with the extraordinarily high trematode colonisation potential in the area studied, the spatial and temporal patterns of intraspecific heterogeneity in recruitment may provide conditions for intensification of interspecific interactions so that complex community assembly rules may be involved.
高的多种物种的招募率和层次竞争是软体动物幼虫吸虫群落竞争排斥模型组装的关键。富营养化环境为加速吸虫传播提供了条件,这将增加种间相互作用的强度。为了验证这些预测,我们首次对腹足纲软体动物宿主进行了评估,并对高度生产力的水生环境中,在个体软体动物宿主斑块水平上,对大型吸虫种的大 guild 的定殖和灭绝率进行了评估。利用一项来自中欧六个富营养化鱼塘中对圆田螺进行的长期标记-重捕研究的独特大数据集,我们证明了吸虫对软体动物宿主的快速定殖,从而满足了竞争排斥模型的假设。总体而言,每年的定殖率范围为 243%至 503%,因此在这些池塘中,吸虫在单个软体动物中建立的几率是每年两到五次。灭绝率远低于定殖率,因此不会导致周转率足够高,从而显著影响软体动物种群的流行模式。在种水平上,基于样本的定殖概率分析表明,与传播和竞争能力相关的共享种特性决定了定殖能力的极限。通过卵被动传递给软体动物的物种的定殖率非常高。由于亚优势种的定殖能力明显优于强优势种和弱优势种,因此物种的竞争能力对定殖率有显著影响,这种模式与竞争-定殖权衡假说的预测一致。我们的研究结果表明,在研究区域具有极高的吸虫定殖潜力的情况下,种内异质性在招募方面的时空模式可能为加强种间相互作用提供条件,从而涉及到复杂的群落组装规则。