Roy Charlotte L, St-Louis Véronique
Wetland Wildlife Populations and Research Group, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, 102 23rd St NE, Bemidji, MN 56601, USA.
Wildlife Biometrics Unit, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, 5463-C West Broadway Avenue, Forest Lake, MN 55025, USA.
Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl. 2017 Jul 15;6(3):162-176. doi: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2017.07.003. eCollection 2017 Dec.
Several non-native trematodes hosted by the invasive Eurasian faucet snail, , have been causing die-offs of waterfowl in the Midwestern United States and Canada for several decades. Because of the potential implications of these die-offs on waterfowl in non-native settings, it is necessary to better understand the trematodes that cause the die-offs. Here, we studied the spatio-temporal dynamics of two trematodes, and spp., known to infect waterfowl in northern Minnesota, USA, via their intermediate host, the faucet snail (). We studied prevalence (% of snails infected within a sample) and intensity (mean number of parasites per infected snail within a sample) of faucet snail infection with these two trematodes in small lakes, large lakes, ponds, and rivers in northern Minnesota in the spring, summer, and fall of 2011-2013. We tested whether parasite prevalence and infection intensity could be explained spatially (as a function of the abundance of faucet snails, average snail size, water depth, and proximity to known waterfowl groups) and temporally (across years and seasons) using generalized estimating equation models. The spatial and temporal patterns we observed varied within and among waterbodies. For both parasite species, parasite prevalence and intensity of infection were consistently higher in samples with larger snails and in deeper portions of the waterbodies. In Lake Winnibigoshish, prevalence was lower farther from the large waterfowl groups we observed, but the abundance of snails in a sample had no effect on prevalence or intensity of infection. Our findings help improve understanding of this multi-species system, but also illustrate the complexity of modeling the spatial and temporal dynamics of infections in waterbodies that are so variable in size, shape, waterfowl use, and function.
几十年来,入侵性的欧亚椎实螺携带的几种非本地吸虫一直在美国中西部和加拿大导致水禽死亡。由于这些死亡事件对非本地环境中的水禽可能产生影响,因此有必要更好地了解导致死亡的吸虫。在这里,我们研究了两种吸虫(分别为[吸虫名称1]和[吸虫名称2]属)的时空动态,已知它们通过中间宿主椎实螺([椎实螺学名])感染美国明尼苏达州北部的水禽。我们研究了2011 - 2013年春季、夏季和秋季明尼苏达州北部的小湖泊、大湖泊、池塘和河流中这两种吸虫感染椎实螺的流行率(样本中感染吸虫的螺类百分比)和感染强度(样本中每只感染螺类体内寄生虫的平均数量)。我们使用广义估计方程模型测试了寄生虫流行率和感染强度是否可以从空间上(作为椎实螺数量、平均螺类大小、水深以及与已知水禽群体的距离的函数)和时间上(跨年份和季节)进行解释。我们观察到的时空模式在水体内部和之间各不相同。对于这两种寄生虫物种,在螺类较大的样本以及水体较深的部分,寄生虫流行率和感染强度一直较高。在温尼比戈希什湖,离我们观察到的大型水禽群体较远的地方流行率较低,但样本中螺类的数量对流行率或感染强度没有影响。我们的研究结果有助于增进对这个多物种系统的理解,但也说明了对大小、形状、水禽利用和功能如此多变的水体中感染的时空动态进行建模的复杂性。