Angley L P, Combs M, Firth C, Frye M J, Lipkin I, Richardson J L, Munshi-South J
Department of Biology, Providence College, Providence, RI, USA.
Louis Calder Center and Department of Biological Sciences, Fordham University, Armonk, NY, USA.
Zoonoses Public Health. 2018 Feb;65(1):e113-e123. doi: 10.1111/zph.12418. Epub 2017 Nov 16.
Brown rats (Rattus norvegicus) are a globally distributed pest. Urban habitats can support large infestations of rats, posing a potential risk to public health from the parasites and pathogens they carry. Despite the potential influence of rodent-borne zoonotic diseases on human health, it is unclear how urban habitats affect the structure and transmission dynamics of ectoparasite and microbial communities (all referred to as "parasites" hereafter) among rat colonies. In this study, we use ecological data on parasites and genomic sequencing of their rat hosts to examine associations between spatial proximity, genetic relatedness and the parasite communities associated with 133 rats at five sites in sections of New York City with persistent rat infestations. We build on previous work showing that rats in New York carry a wide variety of parasites and report that these communities differ significantly among sites, even across small geographical distances. Ectoparasite community similarity was positively associated with geographical proximity; however, there was no general association between distance and microbial communities of rats. Sites with greater overall parasite diversity also had rats with greater infection levels and parasite species richness. Parasite community similarity among sites was not linked to genetic relatedness of rats, suggesting that these communities are not associated with genetic similarity among host individuals or host dispersal among sites. Discriminant analysis identified site-specific associations of several parasite species, suggesting that the presence of some species within parasite communities may allow researchers to determine the sites of origin for newly sampled rats. The results of our study help clarify the roles that colony structure and geographical proximity play in determining the ecology of R. norvegicus as a significant urban reservoir of zoonotic diseases. Our study also highlights the spatial variation present in urban rat parasite communities, indicating that rats across New York City are not reservoirs for a homogenous set of parasites and pathogens. As a result, the epidemiological risks may be similarly heterogeneous for people in urban habitats.
褐家鼠(Rattus norvegicus)是一种全球分布的害虫。城市栖息地可容纳大量鼠患,其携带的寄生虫和病原体对公众健康构成潜在风险。尽管啮齿动物传播的人畜共患病对人类健康有潜在影响,但尚不清楚城市栖息地如何影响鼠群中外寄生虫和微生物群落(以下统称为“寄生虫”)的结构和传播动态。在本研究中,我们利用寄生虫的生态数据及其鼠宿主的基因组测序,来研究空间邻近性、遗传相关性与纽约市部分地区五个地点133只大鼠相关的寄生虫群落之间的关联,这些地区存在持续的鼠患。我们基于之前的研究成果,即纽约的大鼠携带多种寄生虫,并报告这些群落即使在小地理距离内的不同地点之间也存在显著差异。外寄生虫群落相似性与地理邻近性呈正相关;然而,大鼠的距离与微生物群落之间没有普遍关联。总体寄生虫多样性较高的地点,其大鼠的感染水平和寄生虫物种丰富度也较高。不同地点之间的寄生虫群落相似性与大鼠的遗传相关性无关,这表明这些群落与宿主个体之间的遗传相似性或地点间的宿主扩散无关。判别分析确定了几种寄生虫物种的地点特异性关联,这表明寄生虫群落中某些物种的存在可能使研究人员能够确定新采样大鼠的来源地。我们的研究结果有助于阐明群体结构和地理邻近性在确定褐家鼠作为重要城市人畜共患病宿主的生态学中所起的作用。我们的研究还突出了城市大鼠寄生虫群落中存在的空间变异,表明纽约市各地的大鼠并非同质的寄生虫和病原体宿主。因此,城市栖息地人群面临的流行病学风险可能同样具有异质性。