Walker Josephine G, Morgan Eric R
School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Life Sciences Building, 24, Tyndall Avenue, Bristol BS8 1TQ, UK ; Cabot Institute, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1UJ, UK.
Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl. 2014 Aug 13;3(3):242-50. doi: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2014.08.001. eCollection 2014 Dec.
Many parasitic nematode species are generalists capable of infecting multiple host species. The complex life cycle of nematodes, involving partial development outside of the host, facilitates transmission of these parasites between host species even when there is no direct contact between hosts. Infective nematode larvae persist in the environment, and where grazing or water sources are shared ingestion of parasite larvae deposited by different host species is likely. In this paper we examine the extent to which nematode parasite species have been observed in sympatric wild and domestic ungulates. First, using existing host-parasite databases, we describe expected overlap of 412 nematode species between 76 wild and 8 domestic ungulate host species. Our results indicate that host-specific parasites make up less than half of the nematode parasites infecting any particular ungulate host species. For wild host species, between 14% (for common warthog) and 76% (for mouflon) of parasitic nematode species are shared with domestic species. For domestic host species, between 42% (for horse) and 77% (for llamas/alpacas) of parasitic nematode species are shared with wild species. We also present an index of liability to describe the risk of cross-boundary parasites to each host species. We then examine specific examples from the literature in which transmission of nematode parasites between domestic and wild ungulates is described. However, there are many limitations in the existing data due to geographical bias and certain host species being studied more frequently than others. Although we demonstrate that many species of parasitic nematode are found in both wild and domestic hosts, little work has been done to demonstrate whether transmission is occurring between species or whether similar strains circulate separately. Additional research on cross-species transmission, including the use of models and of genetic methods to define strains, will provide evidence to answer this question.
许多寄生线虫物种具有感染多种宿主物种的能力。线虫复杂的生命周期,包括在宿主体外的部分发育阶段,这使得即使宿主之间没有直接接触,这些寄生虫也能够在宿主物种之间传播。感染性线虫幼虫在环境中存活,在共享放牧地或水源的地方,不同宿主物种排出的寄生虫幼虫很可能会被其他物种摄入。在本文中,我们研究了在同域分布的野生和家养有蹄类动物中观察到线虫寄生虫物种的程度。首先,利用现有的宿主 - 寄生虫数据库,我们描述了76种野生和8种家养有蹄类宿主物种之间412种线虫物种的预期重叠情况。我们的结果表明,宿主特异性寄生虫占感染任何特定有蹄类宿主物种的线虫寄生虫不到一半。对于野生宿主物种,14%(普通疣猪)至76%(摩弗伦羊)的寄生线虫物种与家养物种共有。对于家养宿主物种,42%(马)至77%(美洲驼/羊驼)的寄生线虫物种与野生物种共有。我们还提出了一个易感性指数来描述跨界寄生虫对每个宿主物种的风险。然后,我们研究了文献中的具体例子,其中描述了家养和野生有蹄类动物之间线虫寄生虫的传播情况。然而,由于地理偏差以及某些宿主物种比其他物种受到更频繁的研究,现有数据存在许多局限性。虽然我们证明了许多寄生线虫物种在野生和家养宿主中都有发现,但几乎没有研究来证明物种之间是否发生了传播,或者相似的菌株是否单独循环。关于跨物种传播的更多研究,包括使用模型和基因方法来定义菌株,将为回答这个问题提供证据。