Asian School of the Environment, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore; Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Inuyama, Japan; Danau Girang Field Centre, Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, Sabah, Malaysia.
Department of Biomedicine, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University, Oita, Japan.
Int J Parasitol. 2021 Oct;51(11):925-933. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2021.03.003. Epub 2021 Apr 14.
Parasites are important components of ecosystems, influencing trophic networks, competitive interactions and biodiversity patterns. Nonetheless, we are not nearly close to disentangling their complex roles in natural systems. Southeast Asia falls within global areas targeted as most likely to source parasites with zoonotic potential, where high rates of land conversion and fragmentation have altered the circulation of wildlife species and their parasites, potentially resulting in altered host-parasite systems. Although the overall biodiversity in the region predicts equally high, or even higher, parasite diversity, we know surprisingly little about wild primate parasites, even though this constitutes the first step towards a more comprehensive understanding of parasite transmission processes. Here, we characterise the gastrointestinal helminth parasite assemblages of a community of Bornean primates living along the Kinabatangan floodplain in Sabah (Malaysian Borneo), including two species endemic to the island. Through parasitological analyses, and by using several measures of parasite infection as proxies for parasite diversity and distribution, we show that (i) most parasite taxonomic groups are not limited to a single host, suggesting a greater flexibility for habitat disturbance, (ii) parasite infracommunities of nocturnal primates differ from their diurnal counterparts, reflecting both phylogenetic and ecological constraints, and (iii) soil-transmitted helminths such as whipworm, threadworm and nodule worm are widespread across the primate community. This study also provides new parasite records for southern pig-tailed macaques (Macaca nemestrina), silvered langurs (Trachypithecus cristatus) and Western tarsiers (Cephalopachus bancanus) in the wild, while adding to the limited records for the other primate species in the community. Given the information gap regarding primate-parasite associations in the region, the information presented here should prove relevant for future studies of parasite biodiversity and infectious disease ecology in Asia and elsewhere.
寄生虫是生态系统的重要组成部分,影响着营养网络、竞争相互作用和生物多样性模式。尽管如此,我们还远未理清它们在自然系统中复杂的作用。东南亚是全球最有可能出现具有人畜共患潜力的寄生虫的地区之一,在这些地区,土地转换和破碎化的速度很高,改变了野生动物及其寄生虫的循环,可能导致宿主-寄生虫系统发生改变。尽管该地区的整体生物多样性预测同样高,甚至更高,但我们对野生灵长类动物寄生虫的了解却少之又少,尽管这是更全面地了解寄生虫传播过程的第一步。在这里,我们描述了生活在沙巴(马来西亚婆罗洲)基纳巴唐干河洪泛平原的一群婆罗洲灵长类动物的胃肠道寄生虫组合,包括两种岛屿特有种。通过寄生虫学分析,并使用几种寄生虫感染指标作为寄生虫多样性和分布的替代指标,我们表明:(i)大多数寄生虫分类群不限于单一宿主,这表明它们对栖息地干扰的适应性更强;(ii)夜间活动灵长类动物的寄生虫次群与日间活动的灵长类动物不同,这反映了系统发育和生态限制;(iii)土壤传播的蠕虫,如鞭虫、蛔虫和结节虫,在整个灵长类动物群体中广泛存在。这项研究还为南部猪尾猕猴(Macaca nemestrina)、银叶猴(Trachypithecus cristatus)和西部眼镜猴(Cephalopachus bancanus)在野外提供了新的寄生虫记录,同时也增加了该社区中其他灵长类动物的有限记录。鉴于该地区有关灵长类动物-寄生虫关联的信息差距,这里提供的信息应该对未来亚洲和其他地区的寄生虫生物多样性和传染病生态学研究具有相关性。