University of Michigan, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 1013 Ruthven, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
University of Washington, School of Aquatic and Fisheries Sciences, 1122 NE Boat Street, Seattle, WA 98105-5020, USA.
Int J Parasitol. 2019 Jan;49(1):71-81. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2018.09.006. Epub 2018 Nov 15.
Mussels in the order Unionoida comprise ∼75% of the world's freshwater bivalve species and are free-living apart from a brief larval stage that parasitizes fish. We investigated the relationships among species of North American unionid mussels and their known host fishes from a macroevolutionary perspective to test whether and how ecological and evolutionary factors correlate with patterns of host use. A subset of 69 mussel species was chosen based on data availability regarding their fish host repertoires, phylogenetic relationships, and ecology. Despite the brevity of their parasitic life stages, the mussels conformed to the right-skewed distribution of host specificity typical of parasitic taxa, in which most species are specialists and a few are generalists. Phylogenetic least squares regression models identified affinity for low-gradient and riffle habitats, and colonization of post-glacial watersheds as the best predictors for the number of fish host species per mussel. However, the second-best model identified citation number as a predictor of the number of hosts, implying that many mussel-host interactions still remain to be identified. A Multiple Regression Mantel test was performed to identify factors associated with the proportion of hosts shared between pairs of mussel species. Range overlap, citations, genetic distance, and similarity in host infection strategy were significantly correlated with the proportion of hosts shared, yet total variation as explained by the best model was low (R = 0.14). There was evidence of a topological association between mussels and their hosts (P = 0.001) and a significant phylogenetic signal of host specificity (λ = 0.81, P = 0.003), indicating closely related mussels that overlap in range are more likely to be competing for hosts. Our results provide an initial macroevolutionary framework for studying the evolution of host infection strategies in these mussels but also highlights gaps still remaining in our fundamental ecological knowledge of this endangered clade.
贻贝在珠蚌目包括∼75%的世界淡水双壳贝类物种,除了短暂的寄生鱼类的幼虫阶段外,它们是自由生活的。我们从宏观进化的角度研究了北美的珠蚌目贻贝物种及其已知宿主鱼类之间的关系,以检验生态和进化因素与宿主利用模式之间是否以及如何相关。选择了 69 种贻贝物种的一个子集,这些物种基于其鱼类宿主谱、系统发育关系和生态学方面的数据可用性。尽管它们的寄生生活阶段很短,但贻贝符合寄生类群特有的宿主特异性右偏分布,其中大多数物种是专性的,少数是一般性的。系统发育最小二乘回归模型确定了对低梯度和急流生境的亲和力,以及对后冰河时代流域的殖民化,是预测每种贻贝鱼类宿主物种数量的最佳指标。然而,第二个最佳模型确定了引用数量是宿主数量的预测指标,这意味着仍有许多贻贝-宿主相互作用有待发现。进行了多元回归 Mantel 检验,以确定与贻贝物种对之间共享宿主比例相关的因素。范围重叠、引用、遗传距离和宿主感染策略的相似性与共享宿主的比例显著相关,但最佳模型解释的总变异较小(R=0.14)。贻贝与其宿主之间存在拓扑关联(P=0.001)和宿主特异性的显著系统发育信号(λ=0.81,P=0.003),这表明范围重叠的密切相关的贻贝更有可能为宿主而竞争。我们的研究结果为研究这些贻贝的宿主感染策略进化提供了一个初步的宏观进化框架,但也突出了我们对这个濒危类群基本生态知识仍存在差距。