Ostfeld Richard S, Levi Taal, Jolles Anna E, Martin Lynn B, Hosseini Parviez R, Keesing Felicia
Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, New York, United States of America.
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 18;9(9):e107387. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107387. eCollection 2014.
Animal and plant species differ dramatically in their quality as hosts for multi-host pathogens, but the causes of this variation are poorly understood. A group of small mammals, including small rodents and shrews, are among the most competent natural reservoirs for three tick-borne zoonotic pathogens, Borrelia burgdorferi, Babesia microti, and Anaplasma phagocytophilum, in eastern North America. For a group of nine commonly-infected mammals spanning >2 orders of magnitude in body mass, we asked whether life history features or surrogates for (unknown) encounter rates with ticks, predicted reservoir competence for each pathogen. Life history features associated with a fast pace of life generally were positively correlated with reservoir competence. However, a model comparison approach revealed that host population density, as a proxy for encounter rates between hosts and pathogens, generally received more support than did life history features. The specific life history features and the importance of host population density differed somewhat between the different pathogens. We interpret these results as supporting two alternative but non-exclusive hypotheses for why ecologically widespread, synanthropic species are often the most competent reservoirs for multi-host pathogens. First, multi-host pathogens might adapt to those hosts they are most likely to experience, which are likely to be the most abundant and/or frequently bitten by tick vectors. Second, species with fast life histories might allocate less to certain immune defenses, which could increase their reservoir competence. Results suggest that of the host species that might potentially be exposed, those with comparatively high population densities, small bodies, and fast pace of life will often be keystone reservoirs that should be targeted for surveillance or management.
作为多宿主病原体的宿主,动植物物种在质量上存在巨大差异,但这种差异的原因却鲜为人知。包括小型啮齿动物和鼩鼱在内的一群小型哺乳动物,是北美东部三种蜱传人畜共患病原体——伯氏疏螺旋体、微小巴贝斯虫和嗜吞噬细胞无形体——最适宜的天然宿主。对于一组体重跨越两个多数量级的九种常见感染哺乳动物,我们研究了生活史特征或(未知的)与蜱虫接触率的替代指标,是否能预测每种病原体的宿主适宜性。通常,与快节奏生活相关的生活史特征与宿主适宜性呈正相关。然而,一种模型比较方法表明,宿主种群密度作为宿主与病原体接触率的替代指标,总体上比生活史特征得到了更多支持。不同病原体之间,具体的生活史特征和宿主种群密度的重要性略有不同。我们将这些结果解释为支持了两个相互替代但并非相互排斥的假说,以解释为什么在生态上广泛分布的共生物种往往是多宿主病原体最适宜的宿主。第一,多宿主病原体可能会适应它们最有可能接触到的宿主,而这些宿主很可能是数量最多和/或最常被蜱虫叮咬的。第二,具有快节奏生活史的物种可能会减少对某些免疫防御的投入,这可能会提高它们作为宿主的适宜性。结果表明,在可能接触病原体的宿主物种中,那些种群密度相对较高、体型较小且生活节奏快的物种往往是关键宿主,应作为监测或管理的目标。