Are Geckos Paratenic Hosts for Caribbean Island Acanthocephalans? Evidence from Gonatodes antillensis and a Global Review of Squamate Reptiles Acting as Transport Hosts

IF 2.2 4区 哲学 Q2 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History Pub Date : 2019-04-01 DOI:10.3374/014.060.0103
A. Dornburg, A. Lamb, D. Warren, G. Watkins-Colwell, G. Lewbart, J. Flowers
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Abstract It is well known that reptiles can act as paratenic hosts for parasites that use mammals as their definitive hosts. However, studies of potential paratenic hosts in the Caribbean have been temporally restricted to only diurnal species of lizards, thereby neglecting a dominant component of the nocturnal reptilian community: geckos. Many gecko species are human commensals with activity periods that overlap temporally with those of domestic cats, making them prime candidates as potential transport hosts for cat parasites. However, no studies have reported geckos as paratenic hosts for felid parasites on any Caribbean island. Here we report the first records of subcutaneous oligacanthorhynchid cystacanths on the Venezuelan Coastal Clawed Gecko (Gonatodes antillensis) based on specimens collected in Curaçao and Bonaire. The cysts were identified as belonging to the genus Oncicola, likely those of Oncicola venezuelensis. This study reports these geckos as a new host record for oligacanthorhynchid cystacanths, as well as Curaçao and Bonaire as new geographic locales for these acanthocephalan parasites. We additionally provide a review of saurian cystacanths, comparing the restricted taxonomic focus of transport hosts in Caribbean islands to the distribution of paratenic squamate hosts both in the Neotropics and globally. We find evidence that the ability of squamate reptiles to act as transport hosts is a pervasive feature across their Tree of Life, suggesting that these animals may serve as important vectors for transporting parasites between intermediate and definitive hosts.
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壁虎是加勒比岛棘头鹬的寄生生物吗?Gonatodes antillensis的证据和Squamate爬行动物作为运输宿主的全球综述
摘要众所周知,爬行动物可以作为寄生虫的副基因宿主,寄生虫以哺乳动物为最终宿主。然而,对加勒比地区潜在的共生宿主的研究暂时仅限于日间活动的蜥蜴,从而忽视了夜间爬行动物群落的一个主要组成部分:壁虎。许多壁虎物种是人类的共生物种,其活动期与家猫的活动期在时间上重叠,这使它们成为猫寄生虫的潜在运输宿主。然而,没有研究报告壁虎是加勒比海任何岛屿上猫寄生虫的副基因宿主。在这里,我们根据在库拉索和博奈尔采集的标本,首次记录了委内瑞拉海岸爪壁虎(Gonatodes antillensis)的皮下小囊囊藻。这些囊肿被鉴定为属于卷尾蛇属,很可能是委内瑞拉卷尾蛇的囊肿。这项研究报告称,这些壁虎是oligacanthorhychid cytacanths的新宿主记录,库拉索和博奈尔是这些棘头类寄生虫的新地理位置。此外,我们还提供了一篇关于蜥类囊囊类的综述,将加勒比海岛屿运输宿主的有限分类重点与新热带地区和全球的副生鳞片宿主的分布进行了比较。我们发现有证据表明,鳞片爬行动物作为运输宿主的能力是其生命之树的一个普遍特征,这表明这些动物可能是在中间宿主和最终宿主之间运输寄生虫的重要载体。
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来源期刊
Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History
Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION-ECOLOGY
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History publishes original research based on specimens, artifacts and related materials maintained in the collections of the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History’s curatorial divisions. The Bulletin is published twice a year, in April and October.
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