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坦桑尼亚第二高峰不同海拔地区两种啮齿动物的节肢动物外寄生虫

Arthropod Ectoparasites of Two Rodent Species Occurring in Varied Elevations on Tanzania's Second Highest Mountain.

作者信息

Gebrezgiher Genet B, Makundi Rhodes H, Katakweba Abdul A S, Belmain Steven R, Lyimo Charles M, Meheretu Yonas

机构信息

African Centre of Excellence for Innovative Rodent Pest Management and Biosensor Technology Development, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro P.O. Box 3110, Tanzania.

Institute of Pest Management, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro P.O. Box 3110, Tanzania.

出版信息

Biology (Basel). 2023 Mar 2;12(3):394. doi: 10.3390/biology12030394.

Abstract

Climate change causes organisms, including species that act as parasite reservoirs and vectors, to shift their distribution to higher altitudes, affecting wildlife infestation patterns. We studied how ectoparasite distributions varied with altitude using two rodent species, and , at different elevations (1500-3500 m). The ectoparasites infesting the two rodent species were influenced by the host sex, species, and temperature. We expected host density to predict parasite infestation patterns, because hosts in higher densities should have more parasites due to increased contact between individuals. However, temperature, not host density, affected ectoparasite distribution. Since temperatures decrease with elevation, parasite prevalences and abundances were lower at higher elevations, highlighting that the cold conditions at higher elevations limit reproduction and development-this shows that higher elevation zones are ideal for conservation. The rodents and ectoparasite species described in this study have been reported as vectors of diseases of medical and veterinary importance, necessitating precautions. Moreover, Mount Meru is a refuge for a number of endemic and threatened species on the IUCN Red List. Thus, the parasitic infection can also be an additional risk to these critical species as well as biodiversity in general. Therefore, our study lays the groundwork for future wildlife disease surveillance and biodiversity conservation management actions. The study found a previously uncharacterized mite species in the Mesostigmata group that was previously known to be a parasite of honeybees. Further investigations may shed light into the role of this mite species on Mount Meru.

摘要

气候变化导致包括充当寄生虫宿主和病媒的物种在内的生物将其分布范围向更高海拔转移,从而影响野生动物的感染模式。我们利用两种啮齿动物物种,即[物种名1]和[物种名2],研究了外寄生虫分布如何随海拔高度变化,这两种啮齿动物分布于不同海拔(1500 - 3500米)。感染这两种啮齿动物的外寄生虫受到宿主性别、物种和温度的影响。我们原本期望宿主密度能够预测寄生虫感染模式,因为密度较高的宿主由于个体间接触增加应该会有更多寄生虫。然而,影响外寄生虫分布的是温度,而非宿主密度。由于温度随海拔升高而降低,较高海拔处的寄生虫患病率和丰度较低,这突出表明较高海拔处的寒冷条件限制了繁殖和发育——这表明高海拔地区是理想的保护区域。本研究中描述的啮齿动物和外寄生虫物种已被报告为具有医学和兽医学重要性的疾病病媒,因此需要采取预防措施。此外,梅鲁山是国际自然保护联盟红色名录上许多特有和受威胁物种的避难所。因此,寄生虫感染对于这些关键物种以及整个生物多样性来说也可能是额外的风险。所以,我们的研究为未来的野生动物疾病监测和生物多样性保护管理行动奠定了基础。该研究在中气门螨类群中发现了一种先前未被描述的螨类物种,该类群之前已知是蜜蜂的寄生虫。进一步的调查可能会揭示这种螨类物种在梅鲁山上所起的作用。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/e90a/10045264/d19a1074e4e4/biology-12-00394-g001.jpg

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