Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA,
Oecologia. 2013 Dec;173(4):1471-80. doi: 10.1007/s00442-013-2692-x. Epub 2013 Jun 11.
In nature, hosts are exposed to an assemblage of parasite species that collectively form a complex community within the host. To date, however, our understanding of how within-host-parasite communities assemble and interact remains limited. Using a larval amphibian host (Pacific chorus frog, Pseudacris regilla) and two common trematode parasites (Ribeiroia ondatrae and Echinostoma trivolvis), we experimentally examined how the sequence of host exposure influenced parasite interactions within hosts. While there was no evidence that the parasites interacted when hosts were exposed to both parasites simultaneously, we detected evidence of both intraspecific and interspecific competition when exposures were temporally staggered. However, the strength and outcome of these priority effects depended on the sequence of addition, even after accounting for the fact that parasites added early in host development were more likely to encyst compared to parasites added later. Ribeiroia infection success was reduced by 14 % when Echinostoma was added prior to Ribeiroia, whereas no such effect was noted for Echinostoma when Ribeiroia was added first. Using a novel fluorescent-labeling technique that allowed us to track Ribeiroia infections from different exposure events, we also discovered that, similar to the interspecific interactions, early encysting parasites reduced the encystment success of later arriving parasites by 41 %, which could be mediated by host immune responses and/or competition for space. These results suggest that parasite identity interacts with host immune responses to mediate parasite interactions within the host, such that priority effects may play an important role in structuring parasite communities within hosts. This knowledge can be used to assess host-parasite interactions within natural communities in which environmental conditions can lead to heterogeneity in the timing and composition of host exposure to parasites.
在自然界中,宿主暴露于一组寄生虫物种中,这些寄生虫共同在宿主中形成一个复杂的群落。然而,迄今为止,我们对于宿主内寄生虫群落如何组装和相互作用的理解仍然有限。本研究使用幼年两栖类宿主(太平洋角蟾,Pseudacris regilla)和两种常见的吸虫寄生虫(Ribeiroia ondatrae 和 Echinostoma trivolvis),通过实验检验了宿主暴露的顺序如何影响宿主内寄生虫的相互作用。虽然当宿主同时暴露于两种寄生虫时,没有证据表明寄生虫相互作用,但当暴露时间错开时,我们检测到了种内和种间竞争的证据。然而,这些优先效应的强度和结果取决于添加的顺序,即使考虑到在宿主发育早期添加的寄生虫更有可能囊化的事实也是如此。当 Ribeiroia 先于 Echinostoma 添加时,Ribeiroia 的感染成功率降低了 14%,而当 Echinostoma 先于 Ribeiroia 添加时,则没有这种效果。通过使用一种新的荧光标记技术,我们能够跟踪来自不同暴露事件的 Ribeiroia 感染,我们还发现,与种间相互作用相似,早期囊化的寄生虫使后来到达的寄生虫的囊化成功率降低了 41%,这可能是由宿主免疫反应和/或对空间的竞争介导的。这些结果表明,寄生虫身份与宿主免疫反应相互作用,介导宿主内寄生虫的相互作用,因此优先效应可能在宿主内寄生虫群落的结构中发挥重要作用。这一知识可以用于评估自然群落中宿主-寄生虫相互作用,其中环境条件会导致宿主暴露于寄生虫的时间和组成的异质性。