Institute of Zoology, University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Hannover, Germany.
Institute of Parasitology, Centre for Infection Medicine, University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Hannover, Germany.
Am J Primatol. 2023 Jun;85(6):e23494. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23494. Epub 2023 Apr 20.
Parasite infestations depend on multiple host-related and environmental factors. In the case of ectoparasites, which are exposed to the environment beyond the host, an impact of climate, expressed by seasonal or yearly variations, can be expected. However, long-term dynamics of ectoparasite infestations are rarely studied in nonhuman primates. We investigated the yearly variations in ectoparasite infestations of two small primates, the gray (Microcebus murinus) and the golden-brown (Microcebus ravelobensis) mouse lemur. For a more comprehensive evaluation, we also analyzed the potential effects of yearly and monthly climatic variation (temperature, rainfall) in addition to habitat, host sex, age, species, and body mass, on ectoparasite infestation. Individuals of both host species were sampled in two study sites within the Ankarafantsika National Park in northwestern Madagascar during several months (March-November) and across 4 years (2010, 2011, 2015, 2016). Our results show significant monthly and yearly variations in the infestation rates of three native ectoparasite taxa (Haemaphysalis spp. ticks, Schoutedenichia microcebi chigger mites, Lemurpediculus spp. sucking lice) and in ectoparasite species richness in both mouse lemur species. In addition, significant impacts of several host-related (species, sex, body mass) and environmental factors (habitat, temperature, rainfall) were found, but with differences in relevance for the different parasite taxa and partly deviating in their direction. Although some differences could be attributed to either permanent or temporary presence of the parasites on the host or to ecological differences between the host species, the lack of specific knowledge regarding the life cycle and microhabitat requirements of each parasite taxon precludes a complete understanding of the factors that determine their infestation dynamics. This study demonstrates the presence of yearly and monthly dynamics in lemur-parasite interactions in tropical, seasonal, dry deciduous forests in Madagascar, which call out for broad ecological long-term studies focusing both on primate hosts and their parasites.
寄生虫的感染取决于宿主相关因素和环境因素。对于暴露在宿主之外的环境中的外寄生虫,预期会受到气候的影响,表现为季节性或年度变化。然而,在非人类灵长类动物中,很少研究外寄生虫感染的长期动态。我们调查了两种小型灵长类动物——灰色(Microcebus murinus)和金棕色(Microcebus ravelobensis)鼠狐猴的外寄生虫感染的年度变化。为了更全面地评估,我们还分析了除栖息地、宿主性别、年龄、物种和体重之外,每年和每月的气候变化(温度、降雨量)对寄生虫感染的潜在影响。在马达加斯加西北部的安卡拉法桑吉国家公园的两个研究点,我们在多个月(3 月至 11 月)和 4 年(2010 年、2011 年、2015 年和 2016 年)期间对这两个宿主物种的个体进行了采样。我们的结果表明,三种本地外寄生虫类群(Haemaphysalis 属蜱、Schoutedenichia microcebi 恙螨、Lemurpediculus 属吸虱)的感染率以及两种鼠狐猴的外寄生虫物种丰富度都存在显著的月度和年度变化。此外,还发现了几个宿主相关因素(物种、性别、体重)和环境因素(栖息地、温度、降雨量)的显著影响,但对不同寄生虫类群的相关性不同,其方向也存在差异。虽然有些差异可以归因于寄生虫在宿主上的永久或暂时存在,或者归因于宿主物种之间的生态差异,但由于缺乏对每个寄生虫类群的生命周期和微生境要求的具体了解,因此无法完全理解决定它们感染动态的因素。这项研究表明,在马达加斯加的热带季节性干旱落叶林中,狐猴-寄生虫相互作用存在年度和月度动态,这需要广泛的生态长期研究,既要关注灵长类宿主,也要关注它们的寄生虫。