Department of Biology & Advanced Facility for Avian Research, University of Western Ontario, London, N6A 3K7, Canada.
Department of Biology, University of Missouri-St. Louis, St. Louis, 19104, USA.
Parasitol Res. 2020 May;119(5):1563-1572. doi: 10.1007/s00436-020-06646-y. Epub 2020 Apr 3.
In temperate regions, some avian haemosporidian parasites have evolved seasonal transmission strategies, with chronic infections relapsing during spring and transmission peaking during the hosts' breeding season. Because lineages with seasonal transmission strategies are unlikely to produce gametocytes in winter, we predicted that (1) resident birds living within wintering areas of Neotropical migrants would unlikely be infected with North American parasite lineages; and (2) if infected, wintering migratory birds would be more likely to harbor Plasmodium spp. rather than Parahaemoproteus spp. or Haemoproteus spp. parasites in their bloodstreams, as only Plasmodium produces life stages, other than gametocytes, that infect red blood cells. To test these predictions, we used molecular detection and microscopy to compare the diversity and prevalence of haemosporidian parasites among year-round residents and wintering migratory birds during February 2016, on three islands of The Bahamas archipelago, i.e., Andros, Grand Bahama, and Great Abaco. Infection prevalence was low and comparable between migratory (15/111) and resident (15/129) individuals, and it did not differ significantly among islands. Out of the 12 lineages detected infecting migratory birds, five were transmitted in North America; four lineages could have been transmitted during breeding, wintering, or migration; and three lineages were likely transmitted in The Bahamas. Resident birds mostly carried lineages endemic to the Caribbean region. All North American-transmitted parasite lineages detected among migratory birds were Plasmodium spp. Our findings suggest that haemosporidian parasites of migrants shift resource allocation seasonally, minimizing the production of gametocytes during winter, with low risk of infection spillover to resident birds.
在温带地区,一些鸟类血孢子虫寄生虫已经进化出季节性传播策略,慢性感染在春季复发,传播在宿主繁殖季节达到高峰。由于具有季节性传播策略的谱系在冬季不太可能产生配子体,我们预测:(1)居住在新热带候鸟越冬区的留鸟不太可能感染北美的寄生虫谱系;(2)如果感染,越冬候鸟在血液中更有可能携带疟原虫属而不是疟原虫属或血孢子虫属寄生虫,因为只有疟原虫属产生除配子体以外的感染红细胞的生活阶段。为了验证这些预测,我们使用分子检测和显微镜技术,于 2016 年 2 月在巴哈马群岛的三个岛屿(安德罗斯、大巴哈马和大阿巴科)上比较了全年居住的留鸟和越冬候鸟中的血孢子虫寄生虫的多样性和流行率。感染率很低,越冬候鸟(15/111)和留鸟(15/129)之间无显著差异,且三个岛屿之间无显著差异。在感染候鸟的 12 个谱系中,有 5 个是在北美传播的;有 4 个谱系可能在繁殖、越冬或迁徙期间传播;3 个谱系可能在巴哈马传播。留鸟主要携带加勒比地区特有的谱系。在候鸟中检测到的所有北美传播的寄生虫谱系均为疟原虫属。我们的研究结果表明,候鸟的血孢子虫寄生虫会季节性地重新分配资源,最大限度地减少冬季配子体的产生,感染风险很低,不会向留鸟溢出。