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寄生虫保护范式。

Paradigms for parasite conservation.

作者信息

Dougherty Eric R, Carlson Colin J, Bueno Veronica M, Burgio Kevin R, Cizauskas Carrie A, Clements Christopher F, Seidel Dana P, Harris Nyeema C

机构信息

Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, 130 Mulford Hall, Berkeley, CA, 94720, U.S.A.

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, 75 N. Eagleville Road, Storrs, CT, 06269, U.S.A.

出版信息

Conserv Biol. 2016 Aug;30(4):724-33. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12634. Epub 2015 Dec 18.

Abstract

Parasitic species, which depend directly on host species for their survival, represent a major regulatory force in ecosystems and a significant component of Earth's biodiversity. Yet the negative impacts of parasites observed at the host level have motivated a conservation paradigm of eradication, moving us farther from attainment of taxonomically unbiased conservation goals. Despite a growing body of literature highlighting the importance of parasite-inclusive conservation, most parasite species remain understudied, underfunded, and underappreciated. We argue the protection of parasitic biodiversity requires a paradigm shift in the perception and valuation of their role as consumer species, similar to that of apex predators in the mid-20th century. Beyond recognizing parasites as vital trophic regulators, existing tools available to conservation practitioners should explicitly account for the unique threats facing dependent species. We built upon concepts from epidemiology and economics (e.g., host-density threshold and cost-benefit analysis) to devise novel metrics of margin of error and minimum investment for parasite conservation. We define margin of error as the risk of accidental host extinction from misestimating equilibrium population sizes and predicted oscillations, while minimum investment represents the cost associated with conserving the additional hosts required to maintain viable parasite populations. This framework will aid in the identification of readily conserved parasites that present minimal health risks. To establish parasite conservation, we propose an extension of population viability analysis for host-parasite assemblages to assess extinction risk. In the direst cases, ex situ breeding programs for parasites should be evaluated to maximize success without undermining host protection. Though parasitic species pose a considerable conservation challenge, adaptations to conservation tools will help protect parasite biodiversity in the face of an uncertain environmental future.

摘要

寄生物种直接依赖宿主物种生存,是生态系统中的主要调节力量,也是地球生物多样性的重要组成部分。然而,在宿主层面观察到的寄生虫负面影响促使人们形成了根除的保护范式,这使我们离实现分类学上无偏见的保护目标越来越远。尽管越来越多的文献强调了纳入寄生虫的保护的重要性,但大多数寄生虫物种仍未得到充分研究、资金不足且未得到充分重视。我们认为,保护寄生生物多样性需要在对其作为消费物种的作用的认知和评估上进行范式转变,类似于20世纪中叶对顶级捕食者的认知转变。除了将寄生虫视为重要的营养调节者之外,保护从业者现有的工具应明确考虑依赖物种面临的独特威胁。我们借鉴了流行病学和经济学的概念(如宿主密度阈值和成本效益分析),设计了用于寄生虫保护的误差幅度和最小投资的新指标。我们将误差幅度定义为因错误估计平衡种群规模和预测波动而导致宿主意外灭绝的风险,而最小投资则代表为维持可行的寄生虫种群而保护额外宿主所产生的成本。这个框架将有助于识别健康风险最小且易于保护的寄生虫。为了建立寄生虫保护体系,我们建议对宿主 - 寄生虫组合进行种群生存力分析的扩展,以评估灭绝风险。在最严峻的情况下,应评估寄生虫的迁地繁殖计划,以在不损害宿主保护的前提下最大限度地提高成功率。尽管寄生物种带来了巨大的保护挑战,但对保护工具的调整将有助于在不确定的环境未来中保护寄生生物多样性。

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