Wolfson Wellcome Biomedical Laboratories, Division of Biomedical Parasitology, Department of Zoology, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK; School of Biology, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK.
Acta Trop. 2013 Nov;128(2):353-64. doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2012.02.005. Epub 2012 Feb 22.
A study to investigate the effect of environmental predictors on abundance of Biomphalaria, the intermediate host snails of Schistosoma mansoni, was carried out on two small islands in Lake Victoria, Uganda. Malacological surveys were performed at 40 shoreline sites on Kimi and Ngamba islands documenting occurrence of Biomphalaria; other environmental and limnological conditions were also recorded, including gastropod community diversity. Snails were examined for shedding of schistosomes and emerging cercariae were DNA 'barcoded'. For population genetics analysis of Biomphalaria, snails from four populations from each island were also sequenced. Aquatic phosphate concentrations were higher on Kimi island, confirming greater anthropogenic influence, although, snail species diversity and community assemblages were not significantly different between islands. Bayesian geostatistical models were fitted to assess the effect of environmental factors on Biomphalaria abundance and snails' risk of shedding schistosome or non-schistosome cercariae. No factors were found to be significant in the spatial model. The local population genetics of S. mansoni and Biomphalaria on each island followed similar patterns as that seen in previous studies on a lake-wide basis. These findings suggest that smaller scale studies may prove useful as proxies for regional level investigations, with reduced logistical and resource output required. However, further research should also include surveys of terminal host parasite burden, as these will affect even micro-scale dynamics of parasite-intermediate host interactions, as well as be important from a public health perspective in their own right.
一项研究旨在调查环境预测因子对中间宿主曼氏血吸虫的生物种群丰度的影响,该研究在乌干达维多利亚湖的两个小岛上进行。在基米岛和恩甘巴岛上的 40 个海岸线地点进行了贝类学调查,记录了生物种群的存在;还记录了其他环境和湖沼学条件,包括腹足动物群落多样性。检查蜗牛是否有血吸虫脱落,并对新出现的尾蚴进行 DNA“条码”检测。为了进行生物种群的种群遗传学分析,还对来自每个岛屿的四个种群的蜗牛进行了测序。基米岛上的水体磷酸盐浓度较高,证实了人为影响较大,尽管岛屿之间的蜗牛物种多样性和群落组合没有显著差异。贝叶斯地统计学模型被拟合来评估环境因素对生物种群丰度的影响以及蜗牛感染血吸虫或非血吸虫尾蚴的风险。在空间模型中没有发现任何因素具有显著影响。每个岛屿上曼氏血吸虫和生物种群的局部种群遗传学模式与之前在全湖范围内进行的研究相似。这些发现表明,较小规模的研究可能作为区域水平调查的替代方法,所需的后勤和资源投入更少。然而,进一步的研究还应包括对终末宿主寄生虫负担的调查,因为这些因素将影响寄生虫-中间宿主相互作用的微观尺度动态,并且从公共卫生的角度来看,这些因素本身也很重要。