Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2023 Mar;33(2):e2767. doi: 10.1002/eap.2767. Epub 2022 Dec 9.
Invasive species cause environmental degradation, decrease biodiversity, and alter ecosystem function. Invasions can also drive changes in vector-borne and zoonotic diseases by altering important traits of wildlife hosts or disease vectors. Managing invasive species can restore biodiversity and ecosystem function, but it may have cascading effects on hosts, parasites, and human risk of infection. Water hyacinth, Eichhornia crassipes, is an extremely detrimental invader in many sites of human schistosome transmission, especially in Lake Victoria, where hyacinth is correlated with high snail abundance and hotspots of human schistosome infection. Hyacinth is often managed via removal or in situ destruction, but the effects of these strategies on snail intermediate hosts and schistosomes are not known. We evaluated the effects of water hyacinth invasion and these management strategies on the dynamics of human schistosomes, Schistosoma mansoni, and snails, Biomphalaria glabrata, in experimental mesocosms over 17 weeks. We hypothesized that hyacinth, which is inedible to snails, would affect snail growth, reproduction, and cercariae production through the balance of its competitive effects on edible algae and its production of edible detritus. We predicted that destruction would create a pulse of edible detrital resources, thereby increasing snail growth, reproduction, and parasite production. Conversely, we predicted that removal would have small or negligible effects on snails and schistosomes, because it would alleviate competition on edible algae without generating a resource pulse. We found that hyacinth invasion suppressed algae, changed the timing of peak snail abundance, and increased total production of human-infectious cercariae ~6-fold relative to uninvaded controls. Hyacinth management had complex effects on algae, snails, and schistosomes. Removal increased algal growth and snail abundance (but not biomass), and slightly reduced schistosome production. In contrast, destruction increased snail biomass (but not abundance), indicating increases in body size. Destruction caused the greatest schistosome production (10-fold more than the control), consistent with evidence that larger snails with greater access to food are most infectious. Our results highlight the dynamic effects of invasion and management on a globally impactful human parasite and its intermediate host. Ultimately, preventing or removing hyacinth invasions would simultaneously benefit human and environmental health outcomes.
入侵物种会导致环境恶化、生物多样性减少和生态系统功能改变。入侵还可以通过改变野生动物宿主或疾病媒介的重要特征,导致媒介传播和人畜共患病的变化。管理入侵物种可以恢复生物多样性和生态系统功能,但它可能对宿主、寄生虫和人类感染风险产生级联效应。水葫芦,Eichhornia crassipes,是许多人类血吸虫传播地点的极其有害的入侵物种,特别是在维多利亚湖,水葫芦与高蜗牛密度和人类血吸虫感染热点相关。水葫芦通常通过清除或原地破坏来管理,但这些策略对蜗牛中间宿主和血吸虫的影响尚不清楚。我们在 17 周的时间里,在实验中观测试验箱中,水葫芦入侵和这些管理策略对人类血吸虫、曼氏血吸虫和蜗牛、光滑双脐螺的动态影响。我们假设,水葫芦对蜗牛不可食用,通过其对可食用藻类的竞争影响和可食用碎屑的产生,会影响蜗牛的生长、繁殖和尾蚴的产生。我们预测,破坏会产生可食用碎屑资源的脉冲,从而增加蜗牛的生长、繁殖和寄生虫的产生。相反,我们预测清除对蜗牛和血吸虫的影响很小或可以忽略不计,因为它会减轻对可食用藻类的竞争,而不会产生资源脉冲。我们发现,水葫芦入侵抑制了藻类,改变了蜗牛丰度峰值的时间,并使人类感染性尾蚴的总产生量相对于未入侵的对照增加了约 6 倍。水葫芦管理对藻类、蜗牛和血吸虫有复杂的影响。清除增加了藻类的生长和蜗牛的丰度(但不是生物量),并略微减少了血吸虫的产生。相比之下,破坏增加了蜗牛的生物量(但不是丰度),表明体型增大。破坏导致的血吸虫产生量最大(比对照多 10 倍),这与证据一致,即具有更大食物获取能力的更大蜗牛更具传染性。我们的结果突出了入侵和管理对全球有影响力的人类寄生虫及其中间宿主的动态影响。最终,防止或清除水葫芦入侵将同时有益于人类和环境健康。