ABIOTIC AND DEMOGRAPHIC DRIVERS OF FLEA PARASITISM ON DEER MICE IN A RECOVERING MIXED-CONIFER FOREST A DECADE POSTFIRE.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 PARASITOLOGY Journal of Parasitology Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1645/23-45
Colton J Padilla, Jessica T Martin, James W Cain, Matthew E Gompper
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Abstract

With the intensity and frequency of wildfires increasing rapidly, the need to study the ecological effects of these wildfires is also growing. An understudied aspect of fire ecology is the effect fires have on parasite-host interactions, including ectoparasites that might be pathogen vectors. Although some studies have examined the impacts of fire on ticks, studies on other ectoparasites, including pathogen vectors, are rare. To help address this knowledge gap, we examined the abiotic and biotic factors that predict the likelihood and extent of parasitism of deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) by fleas within a landscape of unburned and recovering burned (>9 yr postfire) mixed conifer forests. We sampled 227 individual deer mice across 27 sites within the Jemez Mountains of northern New Mexico in 2022 and quantified measures of parasitism by fleas (primarily Aetheca wagneri). These sites were distributed in both unburned areas (n = 15) and recovering burned areas (n = 12), with the latter derived from 2 large fires, the Las Conchas fire (2011) and the Thompson Ridge fire (2013). Using these data, we tested for differences in prevalence, mean abundance, and mean intensity of fleas on deer mice, focusing on the predictive importance of host sex and fire history. We also created generalized linear mixed-effects models to investigate the best host and environmental predictors of parasitism by fleas. Approximately a decade postfire, we found minimal evidence to suggest that fire history influenced either the presence or intensity of fleas on deer mice. Rather, at the current forest-regeneration stage, the extent of parasitism by fleas was best predicted by measures of host sex, body condition, and the trapline's ability to accumulate water, as measured through topography. As host body condition increased, the probability of males being parasitized increased, whereas the opposite pattern was seen for females. Male mice also had significantly greater flea loads. Among potential abiotic predictors, the topographic wetness index or compound topographic index (a proxy for soil moisture) was positively related to flea intensity, suggesting larger flea populations in burrows with higher relative humidity. In summary, although fire may potentially have short-term impacts on the likelihood and extent of host parasitism by fleas, in this recovering study system, host characteristics and topographic wetness index are the primary predictors of parasitism by fleas.

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火灾后十年,在一片正在恢复的针阔混交林中,鹿鼠跳蚤寄生的非生物和人口驱动因素。
随着野火的强度和频率迅速增加,研究这些野火对生态影响的需求也在不断增长。火灾生态学研究不足的一个方面是火灾对寄生虫-宿主相互作用的影响,包括可能成为病原体载体的体外寄生虫。虽然一些研究已经考察了火灾对蜱虫的影响,但对其他体外寄生虫(包括病原体载体)的研究却很少见。为了填补这一知识空白,我们研究了非生物因素和生物因素,这些因素可以预测鹿鼠(Peromyscus maniculatus)在未烧毁和烧毁后恢复(火烧后 9 年以上)的针叶混交林中被跳蚤寄生的可能性和程度。2022 年,我们在新墨西哥州北部杰米斯山脉的 27 个地点采集了 227 只鹿鼠个体的样本,并对跳蚤(主要是 Aetheca wagneri)的寄生量进行了量化。这些地点分布在未焚烧区(n = 15)和恢复焚烧区(n = 12),其中恢复焚烧区来自两场大火,即拉斯康查斯大火(2011 年)和汤普森岭大火(2013 年)。利用这些数据,我们测试了鹿鼠身上跳蚤的流行率、平均丰度和平均强度的差异,重点关注宿主性别和火灾历史的预测重要性。我们还建立了广义线性混合效应模型,以研究宿主和环境对跳蚤寄生的最佳预测因素。火灾发生后大约十年,我们发现只有极少证据表明火灾历史影响了鹿鼠身上跳蚤的存在或强度。相反,在目前的森林更新阶段,宿主的性别、身体状况以及通过地形测量的迹地积水能力是预测跳蚤寄生程度的最佳指标。随着宿主身体状况的改善,雄鼠被寄生的概率增加,而雌鼠则相反。雄性小鼠的跳蚤数量也明显较多。在潜在的非生物预测因子中,地形湿度指数或复合地形指数(土壤湿度的代表)与跳蚤强度呈正相关,表明相对湿度较高的洞穴中跳蚤数量较大。总之,尽管火灾可能会对跳蚤寄生宿主的可能性和程度产生短期影响,但在这一恢复性研究系统中,宿主特征和地形湿度指数是预测跳蚤寄生的主要因素。
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来源期刊
Journal of Parasitology
Journal of Parasitology 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
7.70%
发文量
60
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Parasitology is the official peer-reviewed journal of the American Society of Parasitologists (ASP). The journal publishes original research covering helminths, protozoa, and other parasitic organisms and serves scientific professionals in microbiology, immunology, veterinary science, pathology, and public health. Journal content includes original research articles, brief research notes, announcements of the Society, and book reviews. Articles are subdivided by topic for ease of reference and range from behavior and pathogenesis to systematics and epidemiology. The journal is published continuously online with one full volume printed at the end of each year.
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