Local extinction of a parasite of Magellanic penguins? The effect of a warming hotspot on a 'cold' trematode.

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q2 PARASITOLOGY Parasitology Pub Date : 2025-03-01 DOI:10.1017/S0031182025000216
Paula Marcotegui, Matias Merlo, Manuel Marcial Irigoitia, María Paz Gutiérrez, Claudio Buratti, Juan Pablo Seco Pon, Manuela Parietti, Juan Tomás Timi
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Abstract

It is often postulated that natural systems are expected to suffer an increasing risk of infectious disease outbreaks as climate change accelerates. In the northern Argentine Sea, the rise of ocean temperature has produced a tropicalization of demersal megafauna since 2013. This rapidly warming hotspot provides an excellent model to test whether fish parasites have increased, declined, or remained stable in the region. Cardiocephaloides physalis a parasite of penguins Spheniscus magellanicus as adult and suspected to parasitize anchovies Engraulis anchoita as larvae is here used to compare their occurrence and abundance between samples composed by 1752 fish of variable age caught at different latitudes during 1993-1995 and 2022 and between 20 juvenile birds and literature data. In the present work, the identity of metacercariae as C. physalis is confirmed genetically, as well as a net decline of population parameters of the parasite to its effective disappearance in anchovies from northern areas and to extremely low levels in fish from southern regions and penguins. After analysing possible causes for such changes in a scenario of rapid regional tropicalization, a direct effect of increasing temperature on parasites arose as the main causal candidate for the observed decline in their populations over the last decades. Beyond the biological and ecological consequences of global change on them, parasites offer excellent systems for measuring and monitoring such effects. The almost local extinction of C. physalis in a marine hotspot of global warming seems to be one of the first examples of such processes.

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麦哲伦企鹅寄生虫的局部灭绝?热点变暖对“冷”吸虫的影响。
人们常常假设,随着气候变化的加速,自然系统遭受传染病爆发的风险将越来越大。在阿根廷海北部,自2013年以来,海洋温度的上升导致了海底巨型动物的热带化。这个快速变暖的热点地区提供了一个很好的模型来测试鱼类寄生虫在该地区是增加、减少还是保持稳定。本文利用1993-1995年和2022年在不同纬度捕获的1752条变龄鱼样本和20只幼鸟样本与文献资料进行了比较,比较了它们的发生率和丰度。在本研究中,从遗传角度证实了囊蚴与physalis的同一性,并证实了该寄生虫种群参数的净下降,在北部地区的凤尾鱼中有效消失,在南部地区的鱼类和企鹅中达到极低水平。在分析了快速区域热带化情景下这种变化的可能原因后,气温升高对寄生虫的直接影响成为过去几十年观察到的寄生虫数量下降的主要原因。除了全球变化对它们造成的生物和生态后果之外,寄生虫还为测量和监测这种影响提供了极好的系统。在全球变暖的海洋热点地区,physalis几乎局部灭绝似乎是这种过程的第一个例子。
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来源期刊
Parasitology
Parasitology 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
280
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Parasitology is an important specialist journal covering the latest advances in the subject. It publishes original research and review papers on all aspects of parasitology and host-parasite relationships, including the latest discoveries in parasite biochemistry, molecular biology and genetics, ecology and epidemiology in the context of the biological, medical and veterinary sciences. Included in the subscription price are two special issues which contain reviews of current hot topics, one of which is the proceedings of the annual Symposia of the British Society for Parasitology, while the second, covering areas of significant topical interest, is commissioned by the editors and the editorial board.
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