HOST TRAITS EXPLAIN MORE VARIATION IN OCCUPANCY OF GENERALISTS THAN SPECIALISTS DUE TO STRONG HOST PREFERENCES AMONG GENERALISTS.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 PARASITOLOGY Journal of Parasitology Pub Date : 2024-12-01 DOI:10.1645/23-51
Emily M Beasley
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Abstract

The range of hosts a parasite can successfully occupy is partially determined by the niche breadth, that is, the set of environmental conditions necessary to maintain a stable population. Niche breadth is often quantified using host specificity, which encompasses the number of host species a parasite can exploit and the parasite's distribution among its hosts. Parasites with a wider niche breadth can potentially occupy more host species and are often more evenly distributed among hosts than parasites with a narrower niche breadth. However, parasites interact with potential hosts within the context of a geographic locality and the set of environmental characteristics associated with it. The extent to which environmental filters associated with host individuals and the geographic context explain variation in occupancy of parasites, and the extent to which variation in occupancy is associated with host range and specificity, is poorly understood. Using data from small mammals and ectoparasites in Vermont, I used a multiscale, multispecies occupancy model (MSOM) to (1) estimate ectoparasite occupancy at 10 geographic sites and on individual hosts within each site, (2) quantify the variation in occupancy explained by the site and host levels of the model using Bayesian R2, and (3) evaluate associations between explained variation and host range of ectoparasites. For ectoparasites collected from at least 4 different host species, I calculated structural specificity to determine the distribution of these parasites across the hosts, and β-specificity to evaluate changes in host use across habitats. Host range was significantly associated with host-level Bayesian R2: generalist parasites had more variation in occupancy explained by host-level covariates than specialist parasites. This result may be explained by differences in structural specificity: many generalists disproportionally occurred on a single-host species, suggesting that host characteristics act as habitat filters for these parasites. There were no significant associations between site-level Bayesian R2 and host specificity. However, some generalists demonstrated high β-specificity, suggesting these parasites may "switch" hosts, depending on host availability. These results highlight that the terms specialist and generalist are context dependent and may not accurately describe the niche breadth of parasite taxa. Understanding variation in host specificity as it pertains to potential habitat filters may be important for predicting which parasites can bypass host filters and "jump" to a novel host, which has implications for the surveillance and management of vector-borne diseases.

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宿主特征对通食动物占用率变化的解释要多于专食动物,因为通食动物对宿主有强烈的偏好。
寄生虫能够成功占据的宿主范围部分取决于生态位广度,即维持种群稳定所需的一系列环境条件。生态位广度通常用宿主特异性来量化,宿主特异性包括寄生虫可以利用的宿主物种数量以及寄生虫在宿主中的分布情况。与生态位广度较窄的寄生虫相比,生态位广度较宽的寄生虫有可能占据更多的宿主物种,在宿主中的分布也往往更均匀。然而,寄生虫与潜在宿主的互动是在地理位置及其相关环境特征的背景下进行的。与宿主个体和地理环境相关的环境过滤因素在多大程度上解释了寄生虫占有率的变化,以及占有率的变化在多大程度上与宿主的范围和特异性相关,目前还不十分清楚。利用佛蒙特州小型哺乳动物和体外寄生虫的数据,我使用了一个多尺度、多物种占据率模型(MSOM)来(1)估计10个地理地点和每个地点内单个宿主的体外寄生虫占据率,(2)使用贝叶斯R2量化该模型的地点和宿主水平所解释的占据率变化,以及(3)评估所解释的变化与体外寄生虫宿主范围之间的关联。对于从至少 4 个不同寄主物种中收集到的体外寄生虫,我计算了结构特异性,以确定这些寄生虫在寄主中的分布情况,并计算了 β 特异性,以评估寄主在不同生境中的使用变化。宿主范围与宿主水平贝叶斯R2有明显相关性:与专科寄生虫相比,通科寄生虫的宿主水平协变量解释了更多的占用率变化。这一结果可以用结构特异性的差异来解释:许多通性寄生虫不成比例地寄生在单一寄主物种上,这表明寄主特征对这些寄生虫起到了生境过滤的作用。地点级贝叶斯 R2 与寄主特异性之间没有明显联系。然而,一些普通寄生虫表现出很高的β特异性,这表明这些寄生虫可能会根据寄主的可用性 "转换 "寄主。这些结果突出表明,专性寄生虫和通性寄生虫这两个术语取决于具体情况,可能无法准确描述寄生虫类群的生态位广度。了解宿主特异性的变化与潜在栖息地过滤器的关系,对于预测哪些寄生虫可以绕过宿主过滤器并 "跳 "到新的宿主上可能很重要,这对病媒传播疾病的监测和管理具有重要意义。
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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.
期刊最新文献
HELMINTH EGGS FROM PACHYCROCUTA BREVIROSTRIS (CARNIVORA, HYAENIDAE) COPROLITES FROM TAURIDA CAVE (EARLY PLEISTOCENE, CRIMEA). DESCRIPTION OF A NEW SPECIES OF GYRINICOLA YAMAGUTI, 1938, FROM THE MONTEZUMA FROG, RANA MONTEZUMAE, IN THE TRANSITION ZONE BETWEEN THE NEARCTIC AND NEOTROPICS. MOLECULAR AND NEW MORPHOLOGICAL DATA ON NEMATODE HEDRURIS DRATINI FOUND PARASITIZING PSEUDIS MINUTA (ANURA: HYLIDAE). HEPATOZOON RUFI N. SP. (APICOMPLEXA: HEPATOZOIDAE) OF BOBCATS (LYNX RUFUS) FROM MISSISSIPPI. HOST TRAITS EXPLAIN MORE VARIATION IN OCCUPANCY OF GENERALISTS THAN SPECIALISTS DUE TO STRONG HOST PREFERENCES AMONG GENERALISTS.
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