Levin Iris I, Colborn Rachel E, Kim Daniel, Perlut Noah G, Renfrew Rosalind B, Parker Patricia G
Department of Biology University of Missouri - St. Louis One University Blvd.St. Louis Missouri 63121; Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center University of Missouri - St. Louis One University Blvd.St. Louis Missouri 63121; Saint Louis Zoo WildCare Institute One Government Dr.St. Louis Missouri 63110.
Department of Biology University of Missouri - St. Louis One University Blvd. St. Louis Missouri 63121.
Ecol Evol. 2016 Jan 11;6(3):716-26. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1894. eCollection 2016 Feb.
Oceanic archipelagos are vulnerable to natural introduction of parasites via migratory birds. Our aim was to characterize the geographic origins of two Plasmodium parasite lineages detected in the Galapagos Islands and in North American breeding bobolinks (Dolichonyx oryzivorus) that regularly stop in Galapagos during migration to their South American overwintering sites. We used samples from a grassland breeding bird assemblage in Nebraska, United States, and parasite DNA sequences from the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador, to compare to global data in a DNA sequence registry. Homologous DNA sequences from parasites detected in bobolinks and more sedentary birds (e.g., brown-headed cowbirds Molothrus ater, and other co-occurring bird species resident on the North American breeding grounds) were compared to those recovered in previous studies from global sites. One parasite lineage that matched between Galapagos birds and the migratory bobolink, Plasmodium lineage B, was the most common lineage detected in the global MalAvi database, matching 49 sequences from unique host/site combinations, 41 of which were of South American origin. We did not detect lineage B in brown-headed cowbirds. The other Galapagos-bobolink match, Plasmodium lineage C, was identical to two other sequences from birds sampled in California. We detected a close variant of lineage C in brown-headed cowbirds. Taken together, this pattern suggests that bobolinks became infected with lineage B on the South American end of their migratory range, and with lineage C on the North American breeding grounds. Overall, we detected more parasite lineages in bobolinks than in cowbirds. Galapagos Plasmodium had similar host breadth compared to the non-Galapagos haemosporidian lineages detected in bobolinks, brown-headed cowbirds, and other grassland species. This study highlights the utility of global haemosporidian data in the context of migratory bird-parasite connectivity. It is possible that migratory bobolinks bring parasites to the Galapagos and that these parasites originate from different biogeographic regions representing both their breeding and overwintering sites.
海洋群岛很容易通过候鸟自然引入寄生虫。我们的目的是确定在加拉帕戈斯群岛以及在北美繁殖的栗胁雀鹀(Dolichonyx oryzivorus)中检测到的两种疟原虫谱系的地理起源,栗胁雀鹀在迁徙到南美洲越冬地的过程中会定期在加拉帕戈斯停留。我们使用了来自美国内布拉斯加州一个草原繁殖鸟类群落的样本,以及来自厄瓜多尔加拉帕戈斯群岛的寄生虫DNA序列,与DNA序列登记库中的全球数据进行比较。将在栗胁雀鹀和更多定居鸟类(如褐头牛鹂Molothrus ater以及北美繁殖地的其他共存鸟类物种)中检测到的寄生虫同源DNA序列与先前在全球各地研究中获得的序列进行比较。在加拉帕戈斯鸟类和迁徙的栗胁雀鹀中匹配的一种寄生虫谱系,疟原虫谱系B,是在全球MalAvi数据库中检测到的最常见谱系,与来自独特宿主/地点组合的49个序列匹配,其中41个起源于南美洲。我们在褐头牛鹂中未检测到谱系B。另一个加拉帕戈斯 - 栗胁雀鹀匹配谱系,疟原虫谱系C,与在加利福尼亚州采样的鸟类的另外两个序列相同。我们在褐头牛鹂中检测到了谱系C的一个密切变体。综合来看,这种模式表明栗胁雀鹀在其迁徙范围的南美洲一端感染了谱系B,在北美繁殖地感染了谱系C。总体而言,我们在栗胁雀鹀中检测到的寄生虫谱系比在牛鹂中更多。与在栗胁雀鹀、褐头牛鹂和其他草原物种中检测到的非加拉帕戈斯血孢子虫谱系相比,加拉帕戈斯疟原虫具有相似的宿主广度。这项研究突出了全球血孢子虫数据在候鸟 - 寄生虫连通性背景下的实用性。迁徙的栗胁雀鹀有可能将寄生虫带到加拉帕戈斯,并且这些寄生虫起源于代表其繁殖地和越冬地的不同生物地理区域。