Programa de Pós-Graduação em Medicina Tropical, Instituto de Medicina Tropical, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, 05403-000, Brazil.
Instituto de Desenvolvimento Sustentável Mamirauá, Tefé, AM, 69553-225, Brazil.
Parasitol Res. 2023 Sep;122(9):2065-2077. doi: 10.1007/s00436-023-07906-3. Epub 2023 Jul 1.
The Brazilian Amazon supports an extremely diverse avifauna and serves as the diversification center for avian malaria parasites in South America. Construction of hydroelectric dams can drive biodiversity loss by creating islands incapable of sustaining the bird communities found in intact forest sites. Besides anthropogenic actions, the presence of parasites can also influence the dynamics and structure of bird communities. Avian malaria (Plasmodium) and related haemosporidian parasites (Haemoproteus and Leucocytozoon) are a globally distributed group of protozoan parasites recovered from all major bird groups. However, no study to date has analyzed the presence of avian haemosporidian parasites in fragmented areas such as land bridge islands formed during artificial flooding following the construction of hydroelectric dams. The aim of this study is to assess the prevalence and molecular diversity of haemosporidians in bird communities inhabiting artificial islands in the area of the Balbina Hydroelectric Dam. The reservoir area covers 443,700 ha with 3546 islands on the left bank of the Uatumã River known to contain more than 400 bird species. We surveyed haemosporidian infections in blood samples collected from 445 understory birds, belonging to 53 species, 24 families, and 8 orders. Passeriformes represented 95.5% of all analyzed samples. We found a low overall Plasmodium prevalence (2.9%), with 13 positive samples (two Plasmodium elongatum and 11 Plasmodium sp.) belonging to eight lineages. Six of these lineages were previously recorded in the Amazon, whereas two of them are new. Hypocnemis cantator, the Guianan Warbling Antbird, represented 38.5% of all infected individuals, even though it represents only 5.6% of the sampled individuals. Since comparison with Plasmodium prevalence data prior to construction of Balbina is not possible, other studies in artificially flooded areas are imperative to test if anthropogenic flooding may disrupt vector-parasite relationships leading to low Plasmodium prevalence.
巴西亚马孙地区拥有极其多样化的鸟类,是南美洲鸟类疟原虫多样化的中心。修建水坝会形成无法维持完整森林中鸟类群落的岛屿,从而导致生物多样性的丧失。除了人为因素外,寄生虫的存在也会影响鸟类群落的动态和结构。鸟类疟原虫(疟原虫)和相关的血孢子虫(血孢子虫和白细胞)是一组广泛分布的原生动物寄生虫,从所有主要鸟类群体中都有发现。然而,迄今为止,没有研究分析过在像人工洪水形成的陆桥岛屿等破碎化区域中,是否存在鸟类血孢子虫寄生虫。本研究旨在评估栖息在巴尔比纳水电站人工岛屿上的鸟类群落中血孢子虫的流行率和分子多样性。水库区占地 443700 公顷,乌图马纳河左岸有 3546 个岛屿,据了解这里有 400 多种鸟类。我们调查了从 445 只下层鸟类(属于 24 科 8 目)采集的血液样本中的血孢子虫感染情况。雀形目占所有分析样本的 95.5%。我们发现总疟原虫的流行率较低(2.9%),有 13 个阳性样本(两个疟原虫 elongatum 和 11 个疟原虫属)属于 8 个谱系。其中 6 个谱系以前在亚马逊地区有记录,而另外 2 个是新记录的。尽管圭亚那颤鸣蚁鸟仅占采样个体的 5.6%,但其占所有感染个体的 38.5%。由于不可能与巴尔比纳水电站建设前的疟原虫流行率数据进行比较,因此需要在人工洪水泛滥地区开展其他研究,以检验人为洪水是否会破坏媒介-寄生虫关系,从而导致疟原虫的低流行率。