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家畜丰度预测吸血蝙蝠的种群动态、免疫特征和细菌感染风险。

Livestock abundance predicts vampire bat demography, immune profiles and bacterial infection risk.

机构信息

Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA

Center for the Ecology of Infectious Disease, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA.

出版信息

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 May 5;373(1745). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0089.

Abstract

Human activities create novel food resources that can alter wildlife-pathogen interactions. If resources amplify or dampen, pathogen transmission probably depends on both host ecology and pathogen biology, but studies that measure responses to provisioning across both scales are rare. We tested these relationships with a 4-year study of 369 common vampire bats across 10 sites in Peru and Belize that differ in the abundance of livestock, an important anthropogenic food source. We quantified innate and adaptive immunity from bats and assessed infection with two common bacteria. We predicted that abundant livestock could reduce starvation and foraging effort, allowing for greater investments in immunity. Bats from high-livestock sites had higher microbicidal activity and proportions of neutrophils but lower immunoglobulin G and proportions of lymphocytes, suggesting more investment in innate relative to adaptive immunity and either greater chronic stress or pathogen exposure. This relationship was most pronounced in reproductive bats, which were also more common in high-livestock sites, suggesting feedbacks between demographic correlates of provisioning and immunity. Infection with both and haemoplasmas were correlated with similar immune profiles, and both pathogens tended to be less prevalent in high-livestock sites, although effects were weaker for haemoplasmas. These differing responses to provisioning might therefore reflect distinct transmission processes. Predicting how provisioning alters host-pathogen interactions requires considering how both within-host processes and transmission modes respond to resource shifts.This article is part of the theme issue 'Anthropogenic resource subsidies and host-parasite dynamics in wildlife'.

摘要

人类活动创造了新的食物资源,这些资源可能改变野生动物与病原体的相互作用。如果资源增加或减少,病原体的传播可能取决于宿主生态学和病原体生物学,但测量跨两个尺度对供应的反应的研究很少。我们通过对秘鲁和伯利兹 10 个地点的 369 只普通吸血蝙蝠进行了为期 4 年的研究来检验这些关系,这些地点的牲畜数量不同,牲畜是一种重要的人为食物来源。我们从蝙蝠身上量化了先天和适应性免疫,并评估了两种常见细菌的感染情况。我们预测,丰富的牲畜可以减少饥饿和觅食的努力,从而使免疫方面的投资增加。来自高牲畜数量地区的蝙蝠具有更高的杀菌活性和中性粒细胞比例,但免疫球蛋白 G 和淋巴细胞比例较低,这表明先天免疫相对于适应性免疫的投资更多,或者慢性压力或病原体暴露更大。这种关系在生殖蝙蝠中最为明显,而生殖蝙蝠在高牲畜数量地区也更为常见,这表明供应与免疫之间存在人口统计学相关性的反馈。与 和 haemoplasmas 的感染与类似的免疫特征相关,并且这两种病原体在高牲畜数量地区的流行程度较低,尽管对于 haemoplasmas 的影响较弱。因此,对供应的这些不同反应可能反映了不同的传播过程。预测供应如何改变宿主-病原体的相互作用需要考虑到宿主内过程和传播模式如何对资源变化做出反应。本文是主题为“人为资源补贴与野生动物中的宿主-寄生虫动态”的特刊的一部分。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c42b/5882995/615003549e1b/rstb20170089-g1.jpg

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