Ganser Claudia, Monadjem Ara, McCleery Robert A, Ndlela Thandeka, Wisely Samantha M
Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, 110 Newins-Ziegler Hall, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 32611, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Eswatini, Kwaluseni, Eswatini.
Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl. 2020 Jul 31;13:62-71. doi: 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2020.07.014. eCollection 2020 Dec.
Infectious diseases vary in prevalence and pathology among host species. Species may differ in prevalence of infection due to varying exposure and susceptibility to disease agents throughout their lifetime, which may be attributable to underlying differences in their phenology, physiology and behavior. A recently growing body of literature has focused on the utility of host life-history traits to provide mechanistic explanations for interspecific variation in host-parasite associations. In this study, we utilized diverse avian and haemosporidian assemblages in an African savanna to evaluate the link between haemosporidia prevalence (, , ) and avian life-history traits such as body size, mating system, nest care and nest structure. We found that variation of haemosporidia prevalence was consistent with life-history traits that pertain to the reproduction of avian host. Nest care was the single most important predictor of infection status. In birds with shared and female-only nest care, the expected rates of parasitism were between 8- and 12-fold higher than in avian brood parasites that provide no nest care. This finding supports the hypothesis that parental care is an evolutionarily costly life-history trait that increases species' risk of infection with vector-borne diseases. The influence of other host traits (nest structure, body size) was less consistent suggesting that differences in the vectors' ecology and host-seeking behavior produce variable patterns of parasitism among haemosporidia genera. Nest structure influenced infection with and only. infections were associated with ground-nesting birds, while infections were associated with birds that build open nest structures. Body size was an important predictor of infections, particularly large-bodied birds like guineafowl and doves, which exhibited high prevalences.
传染病在宿主物种中的流行程度和病理表现各不相同。由于宿主在其一生中接触病原体的程度和易感性不同,物种之间的感染流行率可能存在差异,这可能归因于它们在物候、生理和行为方面的潜在差异。最近越来越多的文献关注宿主生活史特征的作用,以对宿主-寄生虫关联中的种间变异提供机理解释。在本研究中,我们利用非洲稀树草原上不同的鸟类和血孢子虫组合,来评估血孢子虫流行率(,,)与鸟类生活史特征(如体型、交配系统、巢看护和巢结构)之间的联系。我们发现血孢子虫流行率的变化与鸟类宿主繁殖相关的生活史特征一致。巢看护是感染状态的唯一最重要预测因素。在共同进行巢看护和仅由雌性进行巢看护的鸟类中,预期的寄生率比不进行巢看护的鸟类巢寄生者高出8至12倍。这一发现支持了这样的假设,即亲代抚育是一种在进化上成本高昂的生活史特征,会增加物种感染媒介传播疾病的风险。其他宿主特征(巢结构、体型)的影响不太一致,这表明媒介生态学和宿主寻找行为的差异在血孢子虫属之间产生了不同的寄生模式。巢结构仅影响 和 的感染。 感染与地面筑巢鸟类有关,而 感染与建造开放式巢结构的鸟类有关。体型是 感染的重要预测因素,特别是像珍珠鸡和鸽子这样的大体型鸟类,它们的感染率很高。