Park Eunji, Jorge Fátima, Poulin Robert
Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Mol Ecol. 2020 Sep;29(17):3330-3345. doi: 10.1111/mec.15562. Epub 2020 Aug 21.
In parasites that strongly rely on a host for dispersal, geographic barriers that act on the host will simultaneously influence parasite distribution as well. If their association persists over macroevolutionary time it may result in congruent phylogenetic and phylogeographic patterns due to shared geographic histories. Here, we investigated the level of congruent evolutionary history at a regional and global scale in a highly specialised parasite taxon infecting hosts with limited dispersal abilities: the microsporidians Dictyocoela spp. and their amphipod hosts. Dictyocoela can be transmitted both vertically and horizontally and is the most common microsporidian genus occurring in amphipods in Eurasia. However, little is known about its distribution elsewhere. We started by conducting molecular screening to detect microsporidian parasites in endemic amphipod species in New Zealand; based on phylogenetic analyses, we identified nine species-level microsporidian taxa including six belonging to Dictyocoela. With a distance-based cophylogenetic analysis at the regional scale, we identified overall congruent phylogenies between Paracalliope, the most common New Zealand freshwater amphipod taxon, and their Dictyocoela parasites. Also, hosts and parasites showed similar phylogeographic patterns suggesting shared biogeographic histories. Similarly, at a global scale, phylogenies of amphipod hosts and their Dictyocoela parasites showed broadly congruent phylogenies. The observed patterns may have resulted from covicariance and/or codispersal, suggesting that the intimate association between amphipods and Dictyocoela may have persisted over macroevolutionary time. We highlight that shared biogeographic histories could play a role in the codiversification of hosts and parasites at a macroevolutionary scale.
在严重依赖宿主进行扩散的寄生虫中,作用于宿主的地理屏障也会同时影响寄生虫的分布。如果它们的共生关系在宏观进化时间内持续存在,由于共享的地理历史,可能会导致系统发育和系统地理学模式的一致性。在这里,我们研究了一个高度特化的寄生虫类群与其扩散能力有限的宿主之间在区域和全球尺度上的进化历史一致性水平:微孢子虫类的网孢虫属(Dictyocoela spp.)及其宿主端足类动物。网孢虫可以通过垂直和水平方式传播,是欧亚大陆端足类动物中最常见的微孢子虫属。然而,人们对其在其他地方的分布知之甚少。我们首先进行分子筛选,以检测新西兰特有端足类物种中的微孢子虫寄生虫;基于系统发育分析,我们鉴定出9个物种水平的微孢子虫分类单元,其中6个属于网孢虫属。通过区域尺度上基于距离的共系统发育分析,我们确定了新西兰最常见的淡水端足类分类单元副美扇虾(Paracalliope)与其网孢虫寄生虫之间总体一致的系统发育关系。此外,宿主和寄生虫表现出相似的系统地理学模式,表明它们有共同的生物地理学历史。同样,在全球尺度上,端足类宿主及其网孢虫寄生虫的系统发育显示出大致一致的系统发育关系。观察到的模式可能是由协变和/或共扩散导致的,这表明端足类动物和网孢虫之间的密切关联可能在宏观进化时间内一直存在。我们强调,共享的生物地理学历史可能在宏观进化尺度上宿主和寄生虫的共同多样化过程中发挥作用。