Bitters Matthew E, Meyers Jacqui, Resasco Julian, Sarre Stephen D, Tuff Kika T, Davies Kendi F
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA.
CSIRO Land and Water, Black Mountain, Canberra, Australia Capital Territory, Australia.
Ecology. 2022 Sep;103(9):e3758. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3758. Epub 2022 Jun 16.
Habitat loss and fragmentation are likely to seriously impact parasites, a less studied but critical component of ecosystems, yet we lack long-term experimental evidence. Parasites structure communities, increase connectivity in food webs, and account for a large proportion of an ecosystem's total biomass. Food web models predict that parasites with multiple obligate hosts are at greater risk of extinction because the local extinction, or reduction in abundance, of any host will result in a life-cycle bottleneck for the parasite. We examine the response of a parasite and its multiple hosts to forest fragmentation over 26 years in the Wog Wog Habitat Fragmentation Experiment in southeastern Australia. The parasite is the nematode Hedruris wogwogensis, its intermediate host is the amphipod, Arcitalitrus sylvaticus, and its definitive host is the skink, Lampropholis guichenoti. In the first decade after fragmentation, nematodes completely disappeared from the matrix (plantation forestry) and all but disappeared from their definitive host (skinks) in fragments, and by the third decade after fragmentation had not appreciably recovered anywhere in the fragmented landscape compared to continuous forest. The low prevalence of the nematode in the fragmented landscape was associated with the low abundance of one or the other host in different decades: low abundance of the intermediate host (amphipod) in the first decade and low abundance of the definitive host (skink) in the third decade. In turn, the low abundance of each host was associated with changes to the abiotic environment over time due largely to the dynamically changing matrix as the plantation trees grew. Our study provides rare long-term experimental evidence of how disturbance can cause local extinction in parasites with life cycles dependent on more than one host species through population bottlenecks at any life stage. Mismatches in the abundance of multiple hosts over time are likely to be common following disturbance, thus causing parasites with complex life cycles to be particularly susceptible to habitat fragmentation and other disturbances. The integrity of food webs, communities, and ecosystems in fragmented landscapes may be more compromised than presently appreciated due to the sensitivity of parasites to habitat fragmentation.
栖息地丧失和破碎化可能会严重影响寄生虫,寄生虫是生态系统中一个研究较少但至关重要的组成部分,然而我们缺乏长期的实验证据。寄生虫构建群落结构,增加食物网的连通性,并且在生态系统总生物量中占很大比例。食物网模型预测,具有多个专性宿主的寄生虫面临更高的灭绝风险,因为任何一个宿主的局部灭绝或数量减少都会导致寄生虫的生命周期瓶颈。我们在澳大利亚东南部的沃格沃格栖息地破碎化实验中,研究了一种寄生虫及其多个宿主在26年里对森林破碎化的反应。这种寄生虫是线虫沃格沃格赫德鲁里斯线虫(Hedruris wogwogensis),其中间宿主是双足虾类森林跳虫(Arcitalitrus sylvaticus),终末宿主是石龙子蜥蜴(Lampropholis guichenoti)。在破碎化后的第一个十年里,线虫在基质(人工林)中完全消失,在碎片中的终末宿主(石龙子蜥蜴)中也几乎消失,到破碎化后的第三个十年,与连续森林相比,在破碎化景观中的任何地方都没有明显恢复。线虫在破碎化景观中的低感染率与不同十年中一个或另一个宿主的低丰度有关:第一个十年中间宿主(双足虾类)的低丰度,以及第三个十年终末宿主(石龙子蜥蜴)的低丰度。反过来,每个宿主的低丰度又与随着时间推移非生物环境的变化有关,这主要是由于人工林树木生长导致基质动态变化。我们的研究提供了罕见的长期实验证据,证明干扰如何通过任何生命阶段的种群瓶颈,导致生命周期依赖多个宿主物种的寄生虫局部灭绝。随着时间推移,多个宿主丰度的不匹配在干扰后可能很常见,从而使具有复杂生命周期的寄生虫特别容易受到栖息地破碎化和其他干扰的影响。由于寄生虫对栖息地破碎化的敏感性,破碎化景观中食物网、群落和生态系统的完整性可能比目前所认识到的受到更严重的损害。