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土地利用和宿主物种对寄生虫丰富度、流行率和共感染模式的影响。

Influence of land use and host species on parasite richness, prevalence and co-infection patterns.

机构信息

CIBIO, Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources, InBIO Associate Laboratory, Vairão, Portugal.

CIBIO, Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources, InBIO Associate Laboratory, Vairão, Portugal; Natural History and Science Museum, University of Porto, Portugal; Fitzpatrick Institute, DST/NRF Centre of Excellence, University of Cape Town, South Africa.

出版信息

Int J Parasitol. 2021 Jan;51(1):83-94. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.08.005. Epub 2020 Oct 10.

Abstract

Tropical forests are experiencing increasing impacts from a multitude of anthropogenic activities such as logging and conversion to agricultural use. These perturbations are expected to have strong impacts on ecological interactions and on the transmission dynamics of infectious diseases. To date, no clear picture of the effects of deforestation on vector-borne disease transmission has emerged. This is associated with the challenge of studying complex systems where many vertebrate hosts and vectors co-exist. To overcome this problem, we focused on an innately simplified system - a small oceanic island (São Tomé, Gulf of Guinea). We analyzed the impacts of human land-use on host-parasite interactions by sampling the bird community (1735 samples from 30 species) in natural and anthropogenic land use at different elevations, and screened individuals for haemosporidian parasites from three genera (Plasmodium, Haemoproteus, Leucocytozoon). Overall, Plasmodium had the highest richness but the lowest prevalence, while Leucocytozoon diversity was the lowest despite having the highest prevalence. Interestingly, co-infections (i.e. intra-host diversity) involved primarily Leucocytozoon lineages (95%). We also found marked differences between bird species and habitats. Some bird species showed low prevalence but harbored high diversity of parasites, while others showed high prevalence but were infected with fewer lineages. These infection dynamics are most likely driven by host specificity of parasites and intrinsic characteristics of hosts. In addition, Plasmodium was more abundant in disturbed habitats and at lower elevations, while Leucocytozoon was more prevalent in forest areas and at higher elevations. These results likely reflect the ecological requirements of their vectors: mosquitoes and black flies, respectively.

摘要

热带森林正受到越来越多的人为活动的影响,如伐木和转为农业用途。这些干扰预计将对生态相互作用和传染病的传播动态产生强烈影响。迄今为止,还没有明确的迹象表明森林砍伐对病媒传播疾病的影响。这与研究许多脊椎动物宿主和病媒共存的复杂系统的挑战有关。为了克服这个问题,我们专注于一个内在简化的系统 - 一个小的海洋岛屿(圣多美,几内亚湾)。我们通过在不同海拔的自然和人为土地利用中对鸟类群落(30 种中的 1735 个样本)进行采样,分析了人类土地利用对宿主 - 寄生虫相互作用的影响,并对来自三个属(疟原虫、血孢子虫、白细胞虫)的个体进行了血孢子虫寄生虫的筛查。总体而言,疟原虫的丰富度最高,但流行率最低,而白细胞虫的多样性最低,尽管流行率最高。有趣的是,合并感染(即宿主内多样性)主要涉及白细胞虫谱系(95%)。我们还发现鸟类物种和栖息地之间存在明显差异。一些鸟类物种的流行率较低,但携带寄生虫的多样性较高,而其他鸟类物种的流行率较高,但感染的谱系较少。这些感染动态很可能是由寄生虫的宿主特异性和宿主的内在特征驱动的。此外,疟原虫在受干扰的栖息地和较低的海拔高度更为丰富,而白细胞虫在森林地区和较高的海拔高度更为普遍。这些结果可能反映了它们的媒介:蚊子和黑蝇的生态需求。

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