Watson Maggie J
School of Animal & Veterinary Sciences, Charles Sturt University, Boorooma Street, Wagga Wagga, NSW 2642, Australia.
Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl. 2013 May 23;2:190-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2013.05.001. eCollection 2013 Dec.
Parasites are considered drivers of population regulation in some species; unfortunately the research leading to this hypothesis has all been conducted on managed populations. Still unclear is whether parasites have population-level effects in truly wild populations and what life-history traits drive observed virulence. A meta-analysis of 38 data sets where parasite loads were altered on non-domesticated, free-ranging wild vertebrate hosts (31 birds, 6 mammals, 1 fish) was conducted and found a strong negative effect of parasites at the population-level (g = 0.49). Among different categories of response variables measured, parasites significantly affected clutch size, hatching success, young produced, and survival, but not overall breeding success. A meta-regression of effect sizes and life-history traits thought to determine parasite virulence indicate that average host life span may be the single most important driver for understanding the effects of parasites. Further studies, especially of long-lived hosts, are necessary to prove this hypothesis.
寄生虫被认为是某些物种种群调节的驱动因素;不幸的是,导致这一假设的研究都是在人工管理的种群中进行的。目前仍不清楚寄生虫在真正的野生种群中是否具有种群水平的影响,以及哪些生活史特征会导致观察到的毒力。对38个数据集进行了荟萃分析,这些数据集改变了非家养、自由放养的野生脊椎动物宿主(31种鸟类、6种哺乳动物、1种鱼类)的寄生虫负荷,发现寄生虫在种群水平上有很强的负面影响(g = 0.49)。在测量的不同类别响应变量中,寄生虫显著影响了窝卵数、孵化成功率、幼崽数量和存活率,但对总体繁殖成功率没有影响。对被认为决定寄生虫毒力的效应大小和生活史特征进行的荟萃回归表明,宿主平均寿命可能是理解寄生虫影响的最重要单一驱动因素。需要进一步的研究,尤其是对长寿宿主的研究,来证明这一假设。