Department of Biological Sciences, Environmental Change Initiative, Eck Institute of Global Health, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana, United States of America.
Department of Integrative Biology, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2020 Jul 6;14(7):e0008417. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0008417. eCollection 2020 Jul.
Schistosomiasis is responsible for the second highest burden of disease among neglected tropical diseases globally, with over 90 percent of cases occurring in African regions where drugs to treat the disease are only sporadically available. Additionally, human re-infection after treatment can be a problem where there are high numbers of infected snails in the environment. Recent experiments indicate that aquatic factors, including plants, nutrients, or predators, can influence snail abundance and parasite production within infected snails, both components of human risk. This study investigated how snail host abundance and release of cercariae (the free swimming stage infective to humans) varies at water access sites in an endemic region in Senegal, a setting where human schistosomiasis prevalence is among the highest globally.
METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We collected snail intermediate hosts at 15 random points stratified by three habitat types at 36 water access sites, and counted cercarial production by each snail after transfer to the laboratory on the same day. We found that aquatic vegetation was positively associated with per-capita cercarial release by snails, probably because macrophytes harbor periphyton resources that snails feed upon, and well-fed snails tend to produce more parasites. In contrast, the abundance of aquatic macroinvertebrate snail predators was negatively associated with per-capita cercarial release by snails, probably because of several potential sublethal effects on snails or snail infection, despite a positive association between snail predators and total snail numbers at a site, possibly due to shared habitat usage or prey tracking by the predators. Thus, complex bottom-up and top-down ecological effects in this region plausibly influence the snail shedding rate and thus, total local density of schistosome cercariae.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our study suggests that aquatic macrophytes and snail predators can influence per-capita cercarial production and total abundance of snails. Thus, snail control efforts might benefit by targeting specific snail habitats where parasite production is greatest. In conclusion, a better understanding of top-down and bottom-up ecological factors that regulate densities of cercarial release by snails, rather than solely snail densities or snail infection prevalence, might facilitate improved schistosomiasis control.
血吸虫病是全球被忽视的热带病中第二大疾病负担的原因,超过 90%的病例发生在非洲地区,那里只有零星的药物可用于治疗这种疾病。此外,在环境中有大量受感染的蜗牛的情况下,人类在治疗后再次感染可能是一个问题。最近的实验表明,水生因素,包括植物、营养物质或捕食者,可以影响受感染蜗牛中的蜗牛数量和寄生虫产生,这两者都是人类风险的组成部分。本研究调查了在塞内加尔一个流行地区,水接入点的蜗牛宿主丰度和尾蚴(对人类有感染性的自由游动阶段)的释放如何变化,在该地区,人类血吸虫病的流行率是全球最高的。
方法/主要发现:我们在 36 个水接入点的 15 个随机点收集了中间宿主蜗牛,并在同一天将其转移到实验室后计算了每个蜗牛的尾蚴产生量。我们发现水生植被与蜗牛的人均尾蚴释放呈正相关,这可能是因为大型植物含有蜗牛赖以生存的附生生物资源,而饱食的蜗牛往往会产生更多的寄生虫。相比之下,水生大型无脊椎动物蜗牛捕食者的丰度与蜗牛的人均尾蚴释放呈负相关,这可能是因为捕食者对蜗牛或蜗牛感染有几种潜在的亚致死效应,尽管在一个地点,蜗牛捕食者和总蜗牛数量之间存在正相关,这可能是由于共同的栖息地使用或捕食者对猎物的跟踪。因此,该地区复杂的自上而下和自下而上的生态效应可能会影响蜗牛的脱落率,从而影响局部血吸虫尾蚴的总密度。
结论/意义:我们的研究表明,水生大型植物和蜗牛捕食者可以影响人均尾蚴产生量和蜗牛的总丰度。因此,通过针对寄生虫产生量最大的特定蜗牛栖息地,蜗牛控制工作可能会受益。总之,更好地理解调节蜗牛尾蚴释放密度的自上而下和自下而上的生态因素,而不仅仅是蜗牛密度或蜗牛感染率,可能有助于改善血吸虫病控制。