Groupe de recherche en épidémiologie des zoonoses et santé publique, Faculté de médecine vétérinaire, Université de Montréal, Saint-Hyacinthe, Québec, Canada.
Parasit Vectors. 2013 Jul 1;6:195. doi: 10.1186/1756-3305-6-195.
It has been suggested that increasing biodiversity, specifically host diversity, reduces pathogen and parasite transmission amongst wildlife (causing a "dilution effect"), whereby transmission amongst efficient reservoir hosts, (e.g. Peromyscus spp. mice for the agent of Lyme disease Borrelia burgdorferi) is reduced by the presence of other less efficient host species. If so, then increasing biodiversity should inhibit pathogen and parasite invasion.
We investigated this hypothesis by studying invasion of B. burgdorferi and its tick vector Ixodes scapularis in 71 field sites in southeastern Canada. Indices of trapped rodent host diversity, and of biodiversity of the wider community, were investigated as variables explaining the numbers of I. scapularis collected and B. burgdorferi infection in these ticks. A wide range of alternative environmental explanatory variables were also considered.
The observation of low I. scapularis abundance and low B. burgdorferi infection prevalence in sites where I. scapularis were detected was consistent with early-stage invasion of the vector. There were significant associations between the abundance of ticks and season, year of study and ambient temperature. Abundance of host-seeking larvae was significantly associated with deer density, and abundance of host-seeking larvae and nymphs were positively associated with litter layer depth. Larval host infestations were lower where the relative proportion of non-Peromyscus spp. was high. Infestations of hosts with nymphs were lower when host species richness was higher, but overall nymphal abundance increased with species richness because Peromyscus spp. mouse abundance and host species richness were positively correlated. Nymphal infestations of hosts were lower where tree species richness was higher. B. burgdorferi infection prevalence in ticks varied significantly with an index of rates of migratory bird-borne vector and pathogen invasion.
I. scapularis abundance and B. burgdorferi prevalence varied with explanatory variables in patterns consistent with the known biology of these species in general, and in the study region in particular. The evidence for a negative effect of host biodiversity on I. scapularis invasion was mixed. However, some evidence suggests that community biodiversity beyond just host diversity may have direct or indirect inhibitory effects on parasite invasion that warrant further study.
有人认为,增加生物多样性,特别是宿主多样性,可以减少野生动物之间病原体和寄生虫的传播(造成“稀释效应”),从而减少高效储主(例如,携带莱姆病病原体伯氏疏螺旋体的白足鼠属 Peromyscus 种)之间的传播。如果是这样,那么增加生物多样性应该会抑制病原体和寄生虫的入侵。
我们通过研究在加拿大东南部的 71 个野外地点伯氏疏螺旋体及其传播媒介肩突硬蜱 Ixodes scapularis 的入侵,来验证这一假设。我们将捕获的啮齿动物宿主多样性指数和更广泛的群落生物多样性指数作为解释变量,来解释收集的肩突硬蜱数量和这些蜱中伯氏疏螺旋体的感染情况。还考虑了一系列其他替代环境解释变量。
在检测到肩突硬蜱的地点,观察到肩突硬蜱数量少且伯氏疏螺旋体感染率低,这与该媒介的早期入侵相一致。蜱的丰度与季节、研究年份和环境温度之间存在显著关联。幼虫的寻宿主数量与鹿的密度显著相关,而幼虫和若虫的寻宿主数量与枯枝落叶层的深度呈正相关。当非白足鼠属相对比例较高时,宿主的幼虫感染率较低。当宿主物种丰富度较高时,有若虫的宿主感染率较低,但总的来说,若虫丰度随着物种丰富度的增加而增加,因为白足鼠属的数量和宿主物种丰富度呈正相关。当树木物种丰富度较高时,宿主的若虫感染率较低。蜱的伯氏疏螺旋体感染率与候鸟携带的媒介和病原体入侵的速度指数显著相关。
肩突硬蜱的丰度和伯氏疏螺旋体的流行率与解释变量之间的关系与这些物种的一般生物学特性以及研究区域的特定生物学特性一致。宿主生物多样性对肩突硬蜱入侵的负面影响证据相互矛盾。然而,一些证据表明,除了宿主多样性之外,群落生物多样性可能对寄生虫入侵有直接或间接的抑制作用,值得进一步研究。