加利福尼亚州幼蜱季节内动态变化中与气候相关的变化

IF 2.7 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY Ecosphere Pub Date : 2024-11-11 DOI:10.1002/ecs2.70064
Samantha Sambado, Andrew J. MacDonald, Andrea Swei, Cheryl J. Briggs
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候的变化推动了物种物候的变化,影响了从植物-传粉者到消费者-资源的一系列生态互动。寄主-寄生系统的物候变化对病原体的传播动态也有影响。蜱幼虫和若虫数量高峰的季节性时间或物候,通过对同群传播的影响,是蜱传病原体流行的重要驱动力。蜱虫的物候与温度和湿度等气候因素密切相关。因此,区域内和区域间的气候差异会导致物候模式的不同。这些差异可能解释了美国病媒种群中蜱传病原体(莱姆病致病包柔氏菌)流行率的地区差异。例如,造成美国东部蜱虫莱姆病高流行率的一个因素被认为是当地蜱虫的非同步物候期。这样,受感染的若蜱就能将病原体传播给宿主,然后由下一代幼蜱取食。与此相反,在莱姆病流行率普遍低得多的美国西部,蜱的物候被认为更加同步,未感染的幼蜱比可能受感染的若蜱稍早或同时出现,从而降低了水平传播的可能性。在大的空间梯度和时间范围内对幼虫和若虫以及它们的宿主取食物候进行取样具有挑战性,这阻碍了对物候进行详细研究以将其与病原体流行联系起来的尝试。在这项研究中,我们通过密集的季节内取样证明,幼虫和若虫蜱的相对丰度和季节性在纬度梯度上变化很大,很可能反映了美国最西部多变的气候,并可能对病原体传播产生影响。我们发现,取食模式是多变的,幼蜱对主要血餐宿主的同步取食与平均温度有关。通过描述莱姆病病媒在整个气候多变地区的季节内物候模式,我们可以开始在更精细的尺度上确定蜱传疾病风险高的地区及其潜在机制。
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Climate-associated variation in the within-season dynamics of juvenile ticks in California

Changing climate has driven shifts in species phenology, influencing a range of ecological interactions from plant–pollinator to consumer–resource. Phenological changes in host–parasite systems have implications for pathogen transmission dynamics. The seasonal timing, or phenology, of peak larval and nymphal tick abundance is an important driver of tick-borne pathogen prevalence through its effect on cohort-to-cohort transmission. Tick phenology is tightly linked to climatic factors such as temperature and humidity. Thus, variation in climate within and across regions could lead to differences in phenological patterns. These differences may explain regional variation in tick-borne pathogen prevalence of the Lyme disease-causing Borrelia bacteria in vector populations in the United States. For example, one factor thought to contribute to high Lyme disease prevalence in ticks in the eastern United States is the asynchronous phenology of ticks there, where potentially infected nymphal ticks emerge earlier in the season than uninfected larval ticks. This allows the infected nymphal ticks to transmit the pathogen to hosts that are subsequently fed upon by the next generation of larval ticks. In contrast, in the western United States where Lyme disease prevalence is generally much lower, tick phenology is thought to be more synchronous with uninfected larvae emerging slightly before, or at the same time as, potentially infected nymphs, reducing horizontal transmission potential. Sampling larval and nymphal ticks, and their host-feeding phenology, both across large spatial gradients and through time, is challenging, which hampers attempts to conduct detailed studies of phenology to link it with pathogen prevalence. In this study, we demonstrate through intensive within-season sampling that the relative abundance and seasonality of larval and nymphal ticks are highly variable along a latitudinal gradient and likely reflect the variable climate in the far western United States with potential consequences for pathogen transmission. We find that feeding patterns were variable and synchronous feeding of juvenile ticks on key blood meal hosts was associated with mean temperature. By characterizing within-season phenological patterns of the Lyme disease vector throughout a climatically heterogeneous region, we can begin to identify areas with high potential for tick-borne disease risk and underlying mechanisms at a finer scale.

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来源期刊
Ecosphere
Ecosphere ECOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
3.70%
发文量
378
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: The scope of Ecosphere is as broad as the science of ecology itself. The journal welcomes submissions from all sub-disciplines of ecological science, as well as interdisciplinary studies relating to ecology. The journal''s goal is to provide a rapid-publication, online-only, open-access alternative to ESA''s other journals, while maintaining the rigorous standards of peer review for which ESA publications are renowned.
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