Hammond Talisin T, Hendrickson Courtney I, Maxwell Tania L, Petrosky Anna L, Palme Rupert, Pigage Jon C, Pigage Helen K
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 3101 Valley Life Sciences Building, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-3160, USA.
Institute for Conservation Research, 15600 San Pasqual Valley Rd., Escondido, CA, 92027, USA.
Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl. 2019 Apr 29;9:174-183. doi: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2019.04.011. eCollection 2019 Aug.
While rodents frequently host ectoparasites that can vector zoonotic diseases, often little is known about their ectoparasite communities, even in places where hosts frequently interact with humans. Yosemite National Park is an area of high human-wildlife interaction and high potential zoonotic disease transfer. Nonetheless, relatively few studies have surveyed the flea communities on mammalian hosts in this area, and even fewer have characterized the environmental and host factors that predict infestation. We focused on two species, the alpine chipmunk () and the lodgepole chipmunk (), which inhabit Yosemite and surrounding areas and can host fleas that vector plague. Because these hosts are exhibiting differential responses to environmental change, it is valuable to establish baselines for their flea communities before further changes occur. We surveyed fleas on these chipmunk hosts during three years (2013-2015), including in the year of a plague epizootic (2015), and documented significant inter-host differences in flea communities and changes across years. Flea abundance was associated with host traits including sex and fecal glucocorticoid metabolite levels. The average number of fleas per individual and the proportion of individuals carrying fleas increased across years for but not for . To better understand these patterns, we constructed models to identify environmental predictors of flea abundance for the two most common flea species, and . Results showed host-dependent differences in environmental predictors of flea abundance for and , with notable ties to ambient temperature variation and elevation. These results provide insight into factors affecting flea abundance on two chipmunk species, which may be linked to changing climate and possible future plague epizootics.
虽然啮齿动物经常携带可传播人畜共患病的体外寄生虫,但人们对它们的体外寄生虫群落往往知之甚少,即使在宿主经常与人类互动的地方也是如此。优胜美地国家公园是人类与野生动物互动频繁且人畜共患病传播潜力高的地区。尽管如此,相对较少的研究调查了该地区哺乳动物宿主身上的跳蚤群落,甚至更少的研究描述了预测感染的环境和宿主因素。我们重点关注了两种物种,高山花栗鼠()和黑尾花栗鼠(),它们栖息在优胜美地及其周边地区,并且可以携带传播鼠疫的跳蚤。由于这些宿主对环境变化表现出不同的反应,在进一步变化发生之前为它们的跳蚤群落建立基线是很有价值的。我们在三年(2013 - 2015年)期间对这些花栗鼠宿主身上的跳蚤进行了调查,包括在鼠疫流行的年份(2015年),并记录了跳蚤群落在宿主间的显著差异以及多年间的变化。跳蚤丰度与包括性别和粪便糖皮质激素代谢物水平在内的宿主特征相关。对于 来说,个体平均跳蚤数量和携带跳蚤的个体比例随年份增加,而对于 则不然。为了更好地理解这些模式,我们构建了模型来确定两种最常见跳蚤物种 和 的跳蚤丰度的环境预测因子。结果表明,对于 和 ,跳蚤丰度的环境预测因子存在宿主依赖性差异,与环境温度变化和海拔有显著关联。这些结果为影响两种花栗鼠物种身上跳蚤丰度的因素提供了见解,这可能与气候变化和未来可能的鼠疫流行有关。