Lane Beth, Spier Timothy, Wiederholt Julia, Meagher Shawn
Department of Biological Sciences, Western Illinois University, Macomb, Illinois 61455.
J Parasitol. 2015 Feb;101(1):6-17. doi: 10.1645/14-584.1. Epub 2014 Sep 26.
Parasite host specificity has important implications for species diversity estimates, food web dynamics, and host shifts. "White grub" is the metacercaria stage of a fluke ( Posthodiplostomum minimum ) that occurs in many fish species, but no attempt has been made to quantify variation in host use by this worm. Here we used 2 approaches to evaluate host specificity within the strain that infects centrarchids ( P. minimum centrarchi). First, we measured parasite loads in 2 centrarchid hosts, bluegill ( Lepomis macrochirus ) and white crappie ( Pomoxis annularis ), from Spring Lake in McDonough County, Illinois. We found that infection levels differed significantly between these hosts. Prevalence in bluegill was 100% and the median intensity was 940 metacercariae, but only 57% of white crappie were infected (median intensity = 4). Site specificity of white grub also differed significantly between the 2 hosts. In bluegills, kidneys were most heavily infected, whereas in white crappies, livers harbored the most worms. We also performed a literature survey of P. minimum prevalence estimates from 14 centrarchid species from other localities. We calculated the mean white grub prevalence for each host species and used this to calculate STD*, a quantitative index of host specificity. STD* was 1.33, significantly closer to the value for a specialist (STD* = 1.00) than a generalist (STD* = 2.00). This reflects the fact that P. minimum prevalence is higher in Lepomis species than it is in centrarchids outside this genus. These data show that P. minimum centrarchi specializes on Lepomis species, but the causes of this specialization are unknown. This worm may be a single species that differs in host use due to ecological or physiological host differences, or it may be a complex of species that vary in host use for similar reasons. Genetic data are required to evaluate these possibilities.
寄生虫宿主特异性对物种多样性估计、食物网动态和宿主转移具有重要意义。“白蛴螬”是一种吸虫(微小后双盘吸虫)的后尾蚴阶段,存在于许多鱼类物种中,但尚未有人尝试量化这种蠕虫在宿主利用上的差异。在这里,我们使用两种方法来评估感染太阳鱼科鱼类的该吸虫菌株(微小后双盘吸虫太阳鱼科亚种)的宿主特异性。首先,我们测量了来自伊利诺伊州麦克多诺县斯普林湖的两种太阳鱼科宿主——蓝鳃太阳鱼(大口黑鲈)和白 Crappie(美洲 Crappie)体内的寄生虫负荷。我们发现这些宿主之间的感染水平存在显著差异。蓝鳃太阳鱼的感染率为 100%,平均感染强度为 940 个后尾蚴,但只有 57%的白 Crappie 被感染(平均感染强度 = 4)。白蛴螬在这两种宿主中的位点特异性也存在显著差异。在蓝鳃太阳鱼中,肾脏感染最为严重,而在白 Crappie 中,肝脏中寄生的蠕虫最多。我们还对来自其他地区的 14 种太阳鱼科物种的微小后双盘吸虫感染率估计进行了文献调查。我们计算了每种宿主物种的白蛴螬平均感染率,并以此计算 STD*,这是一种宿主特异性的定量指标。STD为 1.33,与专性寄生虫的值(STD = 1.00)相比,明显更接近,而远离泛性寄生虫的值(STD* = 2.00)。这反映了微小后双盘吸虫在大口黑鲈属物种中的感染率高于该属以外的太阳鱼科鱼类这一事实。这些数据表明,微小后双盘吸虫太阳鱼科亚种专门寄生于大口黑鲈属物种,但这种特异性的原因尚不清楚。这种蠕虫可能是由于生态或生理宿主差异而在宿主利用上有所不同的单一物种,也可能是由于类似原因在宿主利用上存在差异的物种复合体。需要遗传数据来评估这些可能性。