Ferrari Nicola, Citterio Carlo V, Lanfranchi Paolo
Department of Veterinary Sciences and Public Health, Università degli Studi di Milano, Via Celoria 10, 20133, Milan, Italy.
Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale delle Venezie - SCT2, Belluno, Italy.
Parasit Vectors. 2016 Feb 17;9:88. doi: 10.1186/s13071-016-1371-2.
Interactions between parasite species within a host play a fundamental role in shaping parasite communities that have been classified within a continuum between interactive and isolationist. Interactive communities are principally structured by interactions between parasite species, while isolationist communities are structured by processes independent of the presence of other parasite species. Assessing whether, and to what extent, parasite communities exist along this continuum has been challenging due to a lack of an index that quantifies the degree of interactivity. Moreover, the absence of an index at the individual host level has made it unfeasible to identify host and extrinsic factors that may influence the degree of interactivity of a parasite community.
Here we propose an infracommunity crowding index that can reflect the degree of interactivity of a parasite community within each individual. This index quantifies the mean number of parasites that the average parasite within a community is exposed to, including the different aspects of parasite communities important in determining the level of interactivity, i.e. total abundance, species richness and evenness. We applied this analytical approach to the abomasal parasite communities of three alpine ruminant species that are traditionally viewed as isolationist.
The application of our index to abomasal parasite communities shows that the majority of parasites live in highly crowded communities, suggesting that these host species harbour interactive parasite communities. In addition, the infracommunity crowding was highly variable and influenced by the host species, as well as by the timing of sampling and host age and sex.
Despite increasing evidence on the influence of interactions between parasite species in shaping infections, an analytical measure to quantify the degree of interactivity of parasite communities is lacking. Here we present a new analytical approach which, when applied to parasite communities, appears to be sensitive to both extrinsic and host factors, highlighting that the degree of interactivity is not a static and specific feature of host species, but rather a dynamical process that keeps evolving during host's life. The new index provides opportunities for further investigations aimed at revealing the determinants of parasite interactivity.
宿主体内寄生虫物种之间的相互作用在塑造寄生虫群落方面起着基础性作用,这些群落已被分类为处于相互作用型和孤立型之间的连续统一体中。相互作用型群落主要由寄生虫物种之间的相互作用构建而成,而孤立型群落则由独立于其他寄生虫物种存在的过程构建而成。由于缺乏量化相互作用程度的指标,评估寄生虫群落是否以及在何种程度上存在于这个连续统一体中一直具有挑战性。此外,个体宿主层面缺乏这样一个指标使得识别可能影响寄生虫群落相互作用程度的宿主和外在因素变得不可行。
在此,我们提出一种群落内拥挤指数,该指数可以反映每个个体内寄生虫群落的相互作用程度。这个指数量化了群落内平均每个寄生虫所接触到的寄生虫平均数量,包括在确定相互作用水平方面重要的寄生虫群落的不同方面,即总丰度、物种丰富度和均匀度。我们将这种分析方法应用于三种传统上被视为孤立型的高山反刍动物物种的皱胃寄生虫群落。
我们的指数在皱胃寄生虫群落中的应用表明,大多数寄生虫生活在高度拥挤的群落中,这表明这些宿主物种拥有相互作用型寄生虫群落。此外,群落内拥挤程度变化很大,并受到宿主物种、采样时间以及宿主年龄和性别的影响。
尽管越来越多的证据表明寄生虫物种之间的相互作用对感染形成有影响,但仍缺乏量化寄生虫群落相互作用程度的分析方法。在此,我们提出一种新的分析方法,当应用于寄生虫群落时,它似乎对外在因素和宿主因素都很敏感,这突出表明相互作用程度不是宿主物种的一个静态和特定特征,而是一个在宿主生命过程中不断演变的动态过程。这个新指数为进一步开展旨在揭示寄生虫相互作用决定因素的研究提供了机会。