Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology, W 529 Nebraska Hall, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0514.
Instituto de Alta Investigación, Universidad de Tarapacá, Antofagasta, 1520 Arica, Chile.
J Parasitol. 2023 Oct 1;109(5):450-463. doi: 10.1645/23-4.
Recent studies of louse ectoparasites from mummies have developed robust data sets that allow a true epidemiological approach to the prehistory of louse parasitism. One epidemiological principle is that the binomial of overdispersion is normally negative, meaning that in a host population, parasites are aggregated in a few individuals. We demonstrate the overdispersion of lice in 3 different prehistoric communities that differ along 3 axes or variables: environmental setting, socioeconomic status, and cultural affiliation. Distinct cultural practices could have been involved in different patterns of louse infestation. Prevalence, intensity, and abundance of infestations exhibit statistically significant differences between the communities. We also find differences in prevalence between subadults and adults that contrasted by cultural affiliation and suggest conditions different from those seen today. We show that overall prevalence was affected primarily by ecological setting, not socioeconomic status nor cultural affiliation. These findings demonstrate that statistical analysis of archaeological data can reveal the states of infestation in past populations with lifestyles not seen in modern people. Our approach paves the way for future comparisons of subpopulations within archaeological communities.
最近对来自木乃伊的虱子外寄生虫的研究已经建立了强大的数据集,使我们能够真正采用流行病学方法来研究虱子寄生的史前史。一个流行病学原则是二项分布的过离散通常为负,这意味着在宿主群体中,寄生虫集中在少数个体中。我们证明了 3 个不同史前社区中虱子的过离散,这 3 个社区在 3 个轴或变量上有所不同:环境背景、社会经济地位和文化归属。不同的文化习俗可能涉及到不同的虱子感染模式。感染的流行率、强度和丰度在社区之间存在统计学上的显著差异。我们还发现,在亚成年人和成年人之间,虱子感染的流行率存在差异,这与文化归属形成对比,并表明与今天所见的情况不同。我们表明,总体流行率主要受到生态环境的影响,而不是社会经济地位或文化归属的影响。这些发现表明,对考古数据的统计分析可以揭示过去具有现代人没有的生活方式的人群的感染状态。我们的方法为未来在考古社区内对亚人群进行比较铺平了道路。